In the EU, ambitious objectives have been set for
education and training since the adoption of the Lisbon Agenda in 2000. The
policies aim among other things to empower the individual through participation
in lifelong learning which is seen as both a right and a duty:
‘People need to want and to be able to take
their lives into their own hands – to become in short, active citizens’ (CEC,
2000, p.7).
However, not all citizens are taking part in lifelong
learning and consequently the EU and its Member States have set up policies
with a ‘particular focus on active and preventative measures for the unemployed
and inactive persons’ (CEC, 2006,
p.1). ‘Inactive’ persons comprise different groups which are marginalised in
terms of participation in lifelong learning, among others ‘low-skilled’ who
have a lower participation rate in education and training activities (Cedefop,
2013).
In this article, the aim is to destabilize the
political discourse on ‘low-skilled’ through individual narratives of being in
low-skilled jobs. Whereas the problem of being low-skilled from a political
perspective is represented as psycho-social problems of the individual, the
narratives point to the complexity of people in low-skilled jobs and the role
of structure to ‘low-skilledness’. The narratives open up issues of power and
the historical arbitrary distinctions between skilled and unskilled in the
Danish labour market. It opens up for how the educational structures produce
‘low-skilled’ people especially in the transition from basic vocational
education and training into an apprenticeship. The article points to the narrow
focus of policies on the ‘supply’ side of lifelong learning and less on the
‘demand’ side of a ‘needy’ global labour market in which precarious jobs are no
longer limited to low-skilled. The article draws on Bacchi’s ‘What’s the
Problem Represented to Be?’ (1999, 2009) and
narrative inquiry.