This book analyzes research on education, identity and community, exploring the ways in which learning can be characterized across 'whole-life' experiences.Recent work on education, identity, and community has expanded the intellectual boundaries of learning research. Learning Lives offers a systematic reflection on these studies, exploring the ways in which learning can be characterized across a range of whole-life experiences. The multidisciplinary contributors also consider the policy implications of recent research.Recent work on education, identity, and community has expanded the intellectual boundaries of learning research. Learning Lives offers a systematic reflection on these studies, exploring the ways in which learning can be characterized across a range of whole-life experiences. The multidisciplinary contributors also consider the policy implications of recent research.Recent work on education, identity, and community has expanded the intellectual boundaries of learning research. From home-based studies examining youth experiences with technology, to forms of entrepreneurial learning in informal settings, to communities of participation in the workplace, family, community, trade union, and school, research has attempted to describe and theorize the meaning and nature of learning. Learning Lives offers a systematic reflection on these studies, exploring how learning can be characterized across a range of whole-life experiences. The volume brings together hitherto discrete and competing scholarly traditions: sociocultural analyses of learning, ethnographic literacy research, geo-spatial location studies, discourse analysis, comparative anthropological studies of education research, and actor network theory. The contributions are united through a focus on the ways in which learning shapes lives in a digital age.Introduction: why learning lives? Julian Sefton-Green and Ola Erstad; Part I. Changing Approaches to Studying Learning: Identity, Policy and Sl,