3rd Annual conference on Anticipation
9-11 October 2019 Oslo, Norway
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Venue
The conference will be held at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design (AHO) in Norway.
AHO campus: Maridalsveien 29, 0175, Oslo
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About
From 9th to 11th October 2019 the 3rd International Conference on Anticipation will be held at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design in Norway (AHO). The conference will provide an interdisciplinary meeting ground in which researchers, scholars and practitioners who are seeking to understand anticipation and anticipatory practices can come together to deepen their understanding and create productive new connections.
The overarching aim of the Conference Series and of the emerging field of Anticipation Studies is to create new perspectives of how individuals, groups, institutions, systems and cultures use ideas of the future to act in the present. In this 3rd conference we see a need to be aware of a diversity of interests and actors in facing future challenges and shaping possible anticipatory alternatives, processes, emergent practices and actual sustainable pathways. Anticipation 2019 therefore benefits from being located in a ‘design university’ where design is no longer a matter of problem solving but of working anticipatorially, that is in an reflexive interplay between making and analysing. The conference, however, it is not limited to Design. Our focus on Anticipation – separately and together – stretches us to construct and communicate via a multitude of disciplines and domains, and more often than not through transdisciplinary linkages and configurations.
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Committees
Professor Andrew Morrison, Oslo School of Architecture and Design (AHO), Conference Chair
Andrew Morrison is Director of the Centre for Design Research (wwww.designresearch.no) at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design (AHO) where he is professor of interdisciplinary design. He works in practice-based inquiry and theory building in transdisiciplinary collaboration and projects with designers, urbanist, architects, technologists and futurists. He is especially interested in the communication design and performative enactments in research and education that engage is in rethinking and reshaping futures through narrative, media and participation. He is currently working on a number of multimodal design fiction works and research into alternative future design, urbanism and landscape views on the arctic that includes field work as well as pedagogical interventions and experiments. At present he is working on a poetics of anticipation. He positions his work in the ‘future present’ tense (Morrison 2018, in press).
Dr Erik Overland, President and Chairman of the Board of World Futures Studies Federation, WFSF (2017-2021)
In addition to his work with the WFSF, Dr Øverland also holds a part time position as a guest researcher at the Freie Universität Berlin, Germany. In Norway he is senior policy advisor to the Minister of Education and Research and has represented Norway as official delegate to several working groups within the EU and to the Steering Committee for Educational Policy and Practice, CDPPE, of The Council of Europe. Dr. Øverland has published several books and scientific articles about futures studies and is one of the most experienced foresight practitioners and futurists in Norway. Øverland was the Project Manager of Norway2030 by the Norwegian Government (1998-2001) and has conducted futures studies for agencies and business enterprises both in Norway and abroad. Two of his most known publications are the article: Øverland, E.F. (2013): Universal perspectivism. Transcending ‘facta’ and ‘futura’ through foresight theory building, Themed issue 2013-1, On the Horizon, Emerald Publishing, and a university textbook CARPE FUTURUM. How to manage the future, Cappelen Publishing 2010.
Professor Dagny Stuedahl, Oslo Metropolitan University
Dagny Stuedahl teaches and researches sociocultural aspects of participatory processes in design. With a background in cultural anthropology, she has worked with design-based research in the cultural heritage sector and museums. Stuedahl has participated in national and international projects spanning net-based vocational training, multimodal communication design, mobile and social media communication design and STS and Actor Network Theory in design. She has been a senior researcher at InterMedia, Faculty of Education, University of Oslo and a Professor at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences. Stuedahl has experience from several multidisciplinary research projects that transcends disciplinary borders between humanities, informatics and educational studies. Her special interest is in how understanding sociocultural processes and dynamics may be inscibed into methods of participatory and co-design in the heritage field and anticipatory views on sustainability.
Associate Professor Lise Hansen, Oslo School of Architecture and Design (AHO)
Lise Amy Hansen is an Associate Professor at The Oslo School of Architecture and Design. Her research is concerned with interaction design and digital movement from code to choreography, involving researchers from the many fields adjacent to design.
Associate Professor Per Koch,Forskningspolitikk& NIFU, Oslo
Per M. Koch is the editor of the Norwegian magazine Forskningspolitikk (Research Policy) and a Senior Adviser at the Norwegian research institute NIFU. He has been working in the field of research and innovation policy since the early 1991, in the Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research, the Research Council of Norway, Innovation Norway and as a researcher and leader at the research institute STEP, later NIFU STEP. He has been a member of several working parties in the OECD; he chaired the OECD STIG project on science, technology and global challenges, led the 5th Framwork Programme project PUBLIN on innovation in the public sector and is associated with the UNESCO work on future literacy.
Professor Amanda Steggell, Oslo National Academy of the Arts (KHiO)
Amanda Steggell holds the position of Professor of choreography at KHiO. She has held positions within performance, new media and electronic art and has been advisor to (amongst others) the Norwegian Ministry of Culture, Arts Council Norway, Norwegian Artistic Research Programme (NARP) and National Research School in the Arts, Sweden. Through her choreography she has created participatory performance-related works in many environments and countries, also co-initiating international projects, such as Motherboard 1996-2008 and Currently 2012-16. She currently leads the NARP funded futures-orientated project, Amphibious Trilogies.
Dr Ole Smørdal, University of Oslo
Dr Smørdal has long-term experience in the intersection between design, education, and computer science. His interests are related to learning ecologies, infrastructuring, social innovation, empowerment, and sustainability. He is specialised in research that is based on research-practice partnerships, and adopts design-based and participatory methods in such collaborations. He is head of a research driven design and development unit, EngageLab, at the University of Oslo.
Mrs. Joana Peace Mungai
Joana Peace Mungai is a multi disciplinary designer. With an educational background in music production and performances she has fundamentally solid experience in arranging concerts and cultural events. She is an interior designer inspired by use of space and rooms, furniture designs and making functional interior with an esthetic sense. Built on the fasination of architecture and the psychological impact of architecture “How does architecture affect us, and how do we affect architecture?Believing that every space has a feeling it is important to not only establish a concept of a design that meets the criteria for that particular given space but hopefully during the prosess and stages of design, the modeling improves it. This is a constant aim”. With projects to show for.
She is currently completing her degrees in Interior Architecture.
Joana is the primary contact for the Anticipation Conference 2019.
Ms Amelie Dinh, Oslo School of Architecture and Design (AHO)
Amelie Dinh is a cross-disciplinary designer with a focus in interaction and service design. Amelie is currently completing a Masters of Design at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design.
Ms Palak Dudani, Oslo School of Architecture and Design (AHO)
Palak Dudani is a designer-researcher from India interested in unpacking the narrative around technology & culture and exploring how it ultimately shapes societies. She believes that while economies are becoming global, their effects and challenges will always be a function of local socio-cultural realities. She’s previously worked with humanitarian aid and development organisations along with med-tech startups. She is currently a master’s candidate in Design at AHO.
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Scientific Committee
Margunn Aanestad, University of Oslo
Lise Amy Hansen, The Oslo School of Architecture and Design
Jonny Aspen, Oslo School of Architecture and Design
Cheryl Ball, Wayne State
Michelle Bastian, The University of Edinburgh
Manuela Celi, Politecnico di Milano
Chiara Colombi, Politecnico di Milano
Ola Erstad, University of Oslo
Keri Facer, Uppsala University
Elena Formia, University of Bologna
Ted Fuller, University of Lincoln
Fernando Galdino
Mads Dahl Gjefsen, Oslo Metropolitan University
Armin Grunwald , Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Laurence Habib, Oslo Metropolitan University
Peter Hemmersam, The Oslo School of Architecture and Design
Jessica Hemmings, University of Gothenburg
Tanja Hichert, Centre for Complex Systems in Transition, Stellenbosch University
Lissa Holloway-Attaway, University of Skövde
Adeline Hvidsten, BI Norwegian Business School
Morgan Ip, The Oslo School of Architecture and Design: Institute of Urbanism and Landscape
Thomas J. Chermack, Colorado State University
Amanda Jane Steggell, Oslo National Academy of the Arts
Wendy Keay-Bright, Cardiff Metropolitan University
William Kempton, The Oslo School of Architecture and Design
Bastien Kerspern, Design Friction
Steinar Killi, The Oslo School of Architecture and Design
Per Koch, Nordic Institute for Studies in Innovation, Research and Education
Joel Gethin Lewis
Gunnar Liestøl, University of Oslo
Ann Light, University of Sussex
Julia Lockheart, University of Wales Trinity Saint David
Henry Mainsah, Oslo Metropolitan University
Betti Marenko, Central Saint Martins University of the Arts London
Thomas Markussen, University of Southern Denmark
Einar Martinussen, The Oslo School of Architecture and Design
Riel Miller, UNESCO
Nancy Odendaal, University of Cape TownErik Ferdinand Øverland, WFSF
Angela Piccini, University of Bristol
Palmyre Pierroux, University of Oslo
Roberto Poli, University of Trento
Rika Preiser, Centre for Complex Systems in Transition, Stellenbosch University
Jaco Quist, Delft University of Technology
Fabrice Roubelat, University of Poitiers
Cynthia Selin, Arizona State University
Johan Siebers, School of Advanced Study, University of London
Kenneth Silseth, University of Oslo
Synne Skjulstad, Westerdals School of Communication
Even Smith Wergeland, The Oslo School of Architecture and Design
Ole Smørdal, University of Oslo
Rolf Steier, University of Oslo
Dagny Stuedahl, Oslo Metropolitan University
Ragnhild Tronstad, Kulturtanken - Arts for Young Audiences Norway
Laurene Vaughan, RMIT University
Danielle Wilde, The University of Tokyo
Theodore Zamenopoulos, The Open University
Click here for our Program
Wednesday 9 October
12:00 – 16:00
DESIGN, FUTURES & SUSTAINABILITY
Free entry via designBRICS Seminar
(limited entry up to 20 people from ANT19 Conference)
Room A2 & A3
17:00
CONFERENCE REGISTRATION
Room A1
18:00
CONFERENCE OPENING
KEYNOTE 1: ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR CYNTHIA SELIN
Rewilding anticipation: Foraging futures, forging futures
Room A2 & A3
18:30 – 20:00
EXHIBITION OPENING
DRINKS & SNACKS
Co-sponsored by designBRICS
AHO Gallery
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Thursday 10 October
08:00 – 08:30
REGISTRATION & REFRESHMENTS
Room A1
08:30 – 08:45
WELCOME
AHO PRO-RECTOR PROF RACHEL TROYE
& PROF ANDREW MORRISON, CONFERENCE CHAIR
Room A2 & A3
08:45 – 09:15
KEYNOTE 2: PROF SOHAIL INAYATULLAH
Castle surrounded by hungry wolves: a stage theory approach to the future
Room A2 & A3
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: CARE
Curated Session 1
Keri Facer, Ann-Kathrin Peters, John Holmberg, Sanna Barrineau, Laila Mendy and Celine Granjou:
How should universities care for the future?
Chair: Hanne Cecilie Geirbo
Room A1 (max 40 people)
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: DESIGN
Curated Session 2
Nina Bjørnstad and Cheryl Akner Koler:
Prototyping futures: How a mindful co-writing method, for short videos, support ideation
Chair: Charlie Danoff
Room A2
(max 40 people)
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: DESIGN
Paper Session 1
Chair: Manuela Celi
Room A3
(max 40 people)
Jomy Joseph:
Designerly ways of futuring: Virtual reality as a foresight tool for long term sustainability
Zachary Colbert:
Unbuilt: An incomplete compendium of anticipatory architectural fictions
Steve Matthewman and Hugh Byrd:
Anticipating a better city: Redesigning post-quakes Christchurch
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: CARE
Paper Session 2
Léo Coutellec, Sebastian J. Moser and Paul-Loup Weil-Dubuc:
Eulogy of a non-predictive anticipatory medicine
Bruce Tonn and Dorian Stiefel:
Institutional innovations for meeting obligations to future generations
Nadezhda Mikova:
Anticipation of low-carbon energy future 2050 in north-west European countries
Chair: Fabrice Roubelat
Room G1+G2
(max 40 people)
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: TIME
Paper Session 3
Fadia Dakka:
Exploring ‘university rhythms’ as anticipatory practices
Even Smith Wergeland:
Hindsight and foresight combined: History as a component in scenario building
Anne Marchais-Roubelat and Fabrice Roubelat:
History, time and futures studies. Tensions from geostrategy anticipatory practices
Chair: Dagny Stuedahl
Room G3
(max 25 people)
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: PERFORMANCE
Paper Session 4
Sergio Urueña, Hannot Rodríguez and Andoni Ibarra:
Enacting anticipatory heuristics: Socio-epistemic robustness as relational quality
Lise Amy Hansen:
Performing diversity in design futures
Luis de Miranda:
Effectual anticipation: Analytical, dialectical and crealectical moments
Chair: Lucia Vesnic-Alujevic
Room G4
(max 25 people)
THEME: METHODS
Technique Workshop 1
Bridgette Engeler:
Building to think – using LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® for Causal Layered Analysis
Chair: Erik Øverland
Room G5
(max 25 people)
11:00 – 11:30
BREAK: Refreshments / Speakers’ Corner
11:30 – 13:00
LOUNGE
Room A1
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: DESIGN
Curated Session 3
Palmyre Pierroux, Rolf Steier, Birgitte Sauge, Anne Qvale, Joran Rudi, Thomas Liu and Ole Petter Larsen:
Virtual reality architecture exhibitions: Means for experimenting with future objects in anticipation studies
Chair: Elena Formia
Room A2
(max 40 people)
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: PERFORMANCE
Curated Session 4
Paul Graham Raven, Johannes Stripple, Graeme McDonald, Alexandra Nikoleris and Peter Pelzer:
FOSSIL / The museum of carbon ruins (an ongoing experiment in the anticipation of decarbonisation)
Chair: Sergio Urueña
Room A3
(max 40 people)
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: PERFORMANCE
Technique Workshop 2
Nicolas Balcom Raleigh, Sofi Kurki, Amos Taylor and Markku Wilenius:
Introducing the futures clinique approach: Examining decision-making for long-range futures of the bioeconomy
Chair: Christophe Bisson
Room G1+G2
(max 40 people)
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: LEARNING
Paper Session 5
Timofei Nestik:
Foresight as a socio-psychological phenomenon: an empirical study
Hanne Cecilie Geirbo, George Anthony Giannoumis, Laurence Habib and Tulpesh Patel:
What kind of technology competence do we actually need?
Ann Light and Hannah Korsmeyer:
Learning to anticipate worlds through participatory speculative design
Chair: Andrew Morrison
Room G3
(max 25 people)
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: CRITIQUE
Paper Session 6
Antonio Furlanetto:
Anticipatory risk management as an articulated futures exercise
Renee Albrecht-Mallinger, Siyuan Ma, Wanying Zhu and Sameer Tendolkar:
Notes from the sea, 2218
Peter Jones:
Cultural-historical anticipation perspectives
Chair: Ted Fuller
Room G4
(max 25 people)
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: METHODS
Paper Session 7
Rocco Scolozzi, Gian Antonio Battistel, Alessandro Gretter, Antonio Furlanetto and Roberto Poli:
Reopening futures of remote, depopulating Alpine areas – the pilot project ALPJOBS
Pernille V. K. Andersen, Anders Horsbøl and Emil Styrbæk Møller:
Interprofessional future workshops as a method towards anticipating a future flexible energy system
Bastien Kerspern:
Game design fiction: Bridging mediation through games and design fiction to facilitate anticipation-oriented thinking
Chair: Daniel Welsh
Room G5
(max 25 people)
13:00 – 14:00
LUNCH
14:00 – 14:30
KEYNOTE 3: DR. GECI KARURI-SEBINA
African cities, anticipation and disconnect (not quite Wakanda)
Room A2 & A3
14:30 – 16:00
THEME: DESIGN
Curated Session 5
Per-Anders Hillgren, Kristina Lindström, Michael Strange, Bo Reimer, Li Jönsson Sara Bjärstorp and Hope Wittmer:
Imagining collaborative future-making
Chair: Lise Hansen
Room A1
(max 40 people)
14:30 – 16:00
THEME: CRITIQUE
Curated Session 6
John O´Reilly, Jamie Brassett and Lucy Kimbell:
Anticipation, creativity and philosophy
Chair: Pupul Bsht
Room A2
(max 40 people)
14:30 – 16:00
THEME: METHODS
Technique Workshop 3
Sanna Ahvenharju and Matti Minkkinen:
Researching futures consciousness
Chair: Adrian Pop
Room A3
(max 40 people)
14:30 – 16:00
THEME: METHODS
Technique Workshop 4
Bridgette Engeler:
Monstrous plots and drunken walks. Designing futures with randomness and risk in mind
Chair: Pedro de Senna
Room G1+G2
(max 40 people)
14:30 – 16:00
THEME: CARE
Paper Session 8
Richard Sandford:
Care and hope in lived futures: locating futures through heritage
Ilkka Tuomi and Aloisius Louie:
Ethics and choice in anticipatory systems
Ted Fuller:
Considering the role of responsible anticipation in human flourishing and the capacity to aspire
Chair: Zachary Colbert
Room G3
(max 25 people)
14:30 – 16:00
THEME: DESIGN
Paper Session 9
Renata Tyszczuk:
Collective scenarios: Rehearsing, predicting, and speculating on climate futures
Håkan Edeholt:
New standpoints for new visions : A call for a comprehensive anticipatory design science
Michele Zannoni and Elena Formia:
The value of design approaches in the future of memory. How digital artefacts can improve methodologies and tools for activating collective memories in urban environments
Chair: Ole Smørdal
Room G4
(max 25 people)
14:30 – 16:00
THEME: METHODS
Paper Session 10
Galina Lola:
The method “graphic coding of intentions”
Tanja Golja:
Education = Anticipatory system?: (educational) designing as anticipatory learning
William Kempton:
Making anticipations
Chair: Marku Willenius
Room G5
(max 25 people)
16:00 – 16:30
BREAK: Refreshments / Speakers’ Corne
16:30 – 18:00
THEME: CARE
Dialogue Session 1
Laurence Habib, Flavio Mesquita Da Silva, Sergej van Middendorp and Frederick Steier:
Generating new futures through collaborative support networks: Reflecting on inclusion, awareness and sustainability
Monica Di Ruvo:
Somewhere in-between design studies and craft practice
Linda Groff:
Anticipating earth crises in Anthropocene age: Future scenarios and a call to action
Chair: Krtistina Lindstrôm
Room A1
(max 40 people)
16:30 – 18:00
THEME: METHODS
Dialogue Session 2
Peter Jones:
Systemic futures thinking: A generative dialogue
Gitanjali Adlakha-Hutcheon:
FATE – A method designed to anticipate socio-technical evolutions
Chair: Per Anders Hilgren
Room A2
(max 40 people)
16:30 – 18:00
THEME: DESIGN
Paper Session 11
Einar Sneve Martinussen and Ted Matthews:
Future faceting – Exploring multifaceted urban futures through interaction and service-design
Flaviano Celaschi, Daniele Fanzini and Elena Formia:
Urban futures by design. Latent factors in design and technology-driven scenarios for mutating cities
Johanna Hautamäki and Marika Hautala:
A game as an anticipatory service design tool
Chair: Paul Ravan
Room A3
(max 25 people)
16:30 – 18:00
THEME: FEELING
Paper Session 12
Shira Stav:
Anticipation, hauntology and nostalgia: Israeli novels of the post-Oslo era
Jerneja Rebernak:
Poetics of attunement
Yue Zou:
Design for feeling the future beyond the human centered zone
Chair: KerI Facer
Room G1+G2
(max 40 people)
16:30 – 18:00
THEME: MIXED
New Ideas Session 1
Bridgette Engeler:
Towards prospective design: Building a capacity for anticipation in design
Fabio Millevoi:
This house is not a hotel. What if it were?
Hanna-Kaisa Pernaa:
Deliberative Anticipation
Dagny Stuedahl and Sisse Finken:
What can design contribute to anticipation studies?
Chair: Steve Mathewman
Room G3
(max 25 people)
16:30 – 18:00
THEME: PERFORMANCE
New Ideas Session 2
Ferry van de Mosselaer:
Creating opportunity spaces: On the dialectics between performative participation and anticipatory spatial planning
Harriet Parry:
Affective heritage futures: Community connection and inclusive evolution
Tanja Hichert:
Bringing together complexity thinking, sustainability science, inter- & transdisciplinary research methods to re-imagine just African futures & how change happens in our contexts
Chair: Steve Mathewman
Room G4
(max 25 people)
16:30 – 18:00
THEME: LEARNING
New Ideas Session 3
Maree Conway:
How contested ideas of the university in the present enable and constrain the emergence of its possible futures
Anouk Heltzel:
Reprodutopia. We need to talk about about the future of reproduction
Wietse Hage:
Synthetic biology: On the feasibility of anticipating future dynamics in complex systems using technology assessment
Chair: Renata Tyszczuk
Room G5
(max 25 people)
18:00 – 18:30
PLENARY DISCUSSION
1 – Thematic Discussion Strategic
2 – Planning futures – Anticipation Conference Series
Room A2 & A3
19:00 – 22:00
CONFERENCE DINNER
(incl. in registration cost)
Venue: DOGA
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Friday 11 October
08:00 – 08:45
REGISTRATION & REFRESHMENTS
Room A1
08:45 – 09:15
KEYNOTE 4: PROF RIEL MILLER
Futures literacy, anticipatory systems and futures studies: An appeal for disciplinarity
Room A2 & A3
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: METHODS
Curated Session 7
Lucy Kimbell, Jamie Brassett, Lucia Vesnic-Alujevic and Daniella Jenkins:
Live policy studio: Anticipating pension reform 32
Chair: Roberto Poli
Room A1
(max 40 people)
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: CRITIQUE
Curated Session 8
Ursula Gobel, Peter Padbury, Maika Sondarjee, Thérèse De Groote:
Imagining Canada’s future: Creating new synergies with foresight / knowledge co-creation and mobilisation to address global challenges
Chair: Per Koch
Room A2
(max 40 people)
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: METHODS
Curated Session 9
Ole Smørdal, Kristian Hoelscher, Ida Nilstad Pettersen, Alexander Wilson, and Maarit Kahila:
Co-constructing city futures: Enabling participation in urban planning processes with ICTs
Chair: Ferry van de Mosselaer
Room A3
(max 40 people)
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: LEARNING
Paper Session 13
Ola Erstad and Kenneth Silseth:
Pathways of anticipation: Futuremaking and the design of social futures
Charles Danoff, Joseph Corneli, Paola Ricaurte Quijano, Charlotte Pierce, Lisa Snow MacDonald and Verena Roberts:
A fictional peeragogical anticipatory learning exploration
Danielle Wilde:
Tasting the future
Chair: Susanne Pratt
Room G1+G2
(max 40 people)
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: CARE
Paper Session 14
Bruce Tonn and Erin Rose:
Anticipation and human rights
Céline Granjou:
Politics of climate anticipation – The promises of underground carbon
Christophe Bisson and David Boirel:
Strategic early warning system for the French nuclear industry: An hybrid approach for better anticipation
Chair: Luis de Miranda
Room G3
(max 25 people)
09:30 – 11:00
THEME: NETWORK
Paper Session 15
Matti Minkkinen, Laura Pouru and Burkhard Auffermann:
Understanding and managing anticipatory ecosystems: Case Finnish Foresight 2020
Gonzalo Iparraguirre:
Symmetric valuation of past and future in the design of anticipatory agendas
Go Yoshizawa, Mineyo Iwase, Nika Ando and Keiichiro Tahara:
Academy of the future in practice
Chair: Erik Øverland
Room G5
(max 25 people)
11:00 – 11:30
BREAK: Refreshments / Speakers’ Corner
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: METHODS
Curated Session 10
Jackeline Lima Farbiarz and Alexandre Farbiarz:
Anticipation design: Participating in the construction of new social senses for education
Chair: Lise Hansen
Room A1
(max 40 people)
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: METHODS
Curated Session 11
Lucia Vesnic-Alujevic and Lucy Kimbell:
FuturGov engagement game
Chair: Laurence Habib
Room A2
(max 40 people)
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: NETWORK
Curated Session 12
Adrian Pop, Poli Roberto, Wilenius Markku, Caillol Marie-Hélène, Fuller Ted and Miller Riel:
Global governance futures
Chair: Richard Sanford
Room A3
(max 40 people)
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: PERFORMANCE
Curated Session 13
Corbin Raymond, Bruce Snaddon, Alettia Chisin, Monica Di Ruvo, Andrew Morrison and Amanda Steggell:
Relational ontologies for futurescaping
Chair: Jamie Brassett
Room G1+G2
(max 40 people)
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: MIXED
Paper Session 16
Kai Reaver:
Digital Zoning – In the age of surveillance capitalism can urban planning help regulate technology?
Manuela Celi and Chiara Colombi:
Design future literacy in the Anthropocene: A matter of awareness
Tim Fisher, Chris Groves, Seth Oliver, Sietske Veenman:
Feeling and rethinking futures: Opening up futures in energy transitions
Chair: Ann Light
Room G3
(max 25 people)
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: METHODS
Paper Session 17
Adam Vigdor Gordon:
Probing the future: The learning organisation In an age of rapid-prototyping
Maryam Heidaripour:
Emerging collectives and the everyday exercise of future-making
Pupul Bisht:
Decolonizing anticipatory practices
Chair: Daneille Wilde
Room G4
(max 25 people)
11:30 – 13:00
THEME: METHODS
Curated Session 14 (Video)
Atousa Poursheikhali, Riel Miller, Reza Dehnavieh, Sara Poursheikhali, Somayeh Noorihekmat and Ali Masoud:
Revealing people’s anticipatory systems through action-learning: A Futures Literacy Lab
Chair: Reil Miller
Room G5
(max 25 people)
13:00 – 14:00
LUNCH
14:00 – 15:30
LOUNGE
Room A1
14:00 – 15:30
THEME: CARE
New Ideas Session 4
Daniel Brielmaier, Sarah Pickman, Ro Spankie, Robin Zebrowski, Sarah Canfield, Wendy Sloan, Cathlyn Newell and Anne Sofie Karhio:
Anticipating dark futures
Chair: Keri Facer
Room A2
(max 40 people)
14:00 – 15:30
THEME: PERFORMANCE
Curated Session 15
Claire van Rhyn, Ricardo Dutra Gonçalves, Heather Huggins and Ingvild Øverland:
Future-making in education through social presencing theatre: An awareness-based anticipatory methodology
Chair: Li Jonsson
Room A3
(max 40 people)
14:00 – 15:30
THEME: CARE
Curated Session 16
Laurence Habib, Flavio Mesquita da Silva, Sergej van Middendorp and Frederick Steier:
Collaborative support networks as generative of new futures: Using world café and other dialogic methods to further inclusion, awareness and sustainability
Chair: Dagny Stuedahl
Room G1+G2
(max 40 people)
14:00 – 15:30
THEME: MIXED
Paper Session 18
Susanne Pratt and Giedre Kligyte_
Experiential futures in transdisciplinary higher education: Feeling futures and making them worth our wants
Lenneke Kuijer:
Using research products to anticipate future everyday life
Christopher Pearsell-Ross:
Futures Compass: Gaming uncertain futures
Chair: Bastien Kerspern
Room G3
(max 25 people)
14:00 – 15:30
THEME: MIXED
Paper Session 19
Katriina Siivonen:
Traces of human-nature interface as a cultural transformation towards sustainable futures
Renee Perez:
We’re wasting time: Harnessing the temporality of commodities to motivate responsible consumption
Bridgette Engeler:
Capturing uncertainty in material culture
Chair: Marta Struminska-Kutra
Room G4
(max 25 people)
14:00 – 15:30
THEME: PERFORMANCE
Paper Session 20
Sanna Ketonen-Oksi:
Discussing the role of strategic management consultancies in anticipating more socially, environmentally and economically sustainable future(s) – a case study
Daniel Welch and Ulrike Ehgartner:
Imagined Futures of Consumption
Pedro De Senna, Irianna Lianaki Dedouli and Epaminondas Christofilopoulos:
Theatre arts and futures literacy: Anticipating an approximation
Chair: Peter Hemmersam
Room G5
(max 25 people)
15:30 – 16:00
BREAK: Refreshments / Speakers’ Corner
16:00 – 16:30
KEYNOTE 5: EINAR SNEVE MARTINUSSEN
Design for a nordic digital shift
Room A2 & A3
16:30 – 17:00
PLENARY: Discussion & announcement of next conference
Rooms A2 & A3
17:00-18:00
CONFERENCE FUTURES: Open discussion & planning
Rooms A2 & A3
18:00 –
DRINKS: At Dansens Hus (self-organised)