MLW:Crazy Foresight

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(Participants)
(Participants)
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* Paul D Aligica, US, on alternative institutional futures
* Paul D Aligica, US, on alternative institutional futures
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If you want to register for this event, please contact the main organizer Mr. Florin Dragomir, email: [mailto:florin_g_dragomir@yahoo.com florin_g_dragomir(at)yahoo.com] .
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If you want to register for this event, please contact the main organizer Ms. Iulia Maries, email: [mailto:iulia.maries@hotmail.com iulia.maries(at)hotmail.com] .
==References==
==References==

Revision as of 12:50, 31 March 2010

Crazy Foresight is a workshop to be organized in Bucharest,in Jamuary 2011. The coordinators are Prof. George Cairns and Prof. Ziauddin Sardar.

Contents

Vision and Objectives

‘Any useful idea about the future', says Jim Dator – considered by many to be grandfather of the field – 'should appear to be ridiculous'[1]. Why? Because much of the future is going to be totally novel and has not been currently or previously experienced. Thus, anything useful that one can say about the future would appear to most people as quite crazy. Dator goes on to state, in his Seventh Law of Futures, that 'if futurists expect to be useful, they should expect to be ridiculed and for their ideas initially to be rejected'. In a slightly different vein, Sardar's First Law of Futures Studies states that 'futures studies are wicked'. They are wicked because they deal with 'wicked problems' which are by nature complex, chaotic, interconnected with in-built contradictions and uncertainty. But futures studies are also 'wicked in the sense that they are playfully open ended (like a 'scientific' discipline they do not offer a single solution but only possibilities). Their boundaries, such as they are, are totally porous and they are quite happy to borrow ideas and tools, whatever is needed, from any and all disciplines and discourses'[2].

So what some people may perceive as crazy may actually be highly useful. And wickedness – that highlights and plays with complexity and uncertainty with verve and wit – can actually open up new domains for the future, unlocking the 'unthought' of foresight and futures studies. Far from being irrelevant, crazy and playfully wicked ideas have a positive role in futures and foresight work and can be useful tools for investigating the outer boundaries of futures deliberations and perceptions.

This workshop explores the role of crazy and wicked ideas in futures studies – an exercise that has never been undertaken before. It asks such questions such as:

  • What is perceived as ‘crazy’ and ’wicked’? Are perceptions culturally grounded? Can we define and pin down such notions? Can we escape negative connotations of them?
  • How do we encourage genuinely crazy and wicked ideas in the exploration of alternative futures – in scenario work, visioning, game theory and other methods?
  • How do we break free of dominant paradigms of rationality, ‘the truth’ and a search for the ‘right answer’ when dealing with complex and ambiguous problems?
  • How do ideas – like the personal computer – turn from being crazy fantasies to every day realities?
  • Are all crazy ideas relevant? Or, are some more relevant than others? If so, how do we distinguish between the two? How do we define ‘relevance’ in any case?
  • Is it possible to judge the validity and quality of crazy futures? If so, what criteria would we use to evaluate such notions?
  • Can crazy and wicked ideas contribute to shaping and formulating policy?

Format

The workshop will be organised as a ‘round table’ format. Participants will be required to submit a brief discussion paper for distribution at least 3 weeks before the event. From these, the coordinators will identify a number of key themes and issues: both of convergence in thinking and, specifically, of divergence. These will be used to form the initial agenda for an open dialogue in line with the principles of the Bohm Dialogues on Day One. On Day Two, the coordinators will set an outline agenda, derived from Day One, that seeks to focus thinking towards futures for higher education in Romania within a global context.

Deliverables

A number of specific papers will be commissioned for the workshop with the hope that they will become the basis for a special issue of Futures on 'Crazy Futures'.

Participants

The workshop will bring together colourful characters from the fields of Foresight & Future Studies, from Australia, US, Europe and India. A provisional list of participants would include:

  • Jim Dator, Grandfather of Futures Studies, who first suggested the idea of crazy futures
  • Ashis Nandy, Psychologist and Futurist, Grandfather of dissenting thought in India
  • Marcus Bussey or Paul Wildman, both Independent Futurists, focussing on wild cards, Australia
  • Fabienne Goux Baudimen, Independent Futurist, France
  • Wendy Schultz, Independent Futurists who specialises on crazy ideas
  • Alfonso Montuori, Associate Editor, World Futures journal, US
  • Paul D Aligica, US, on alternative institutional futures

If you want to register for this event, please contact the main organizer Ms. Iulia Maries, email: iulia.maries(at)hotmail.com .

References

  1. http://www.futures.hawaii.edu/stage/2006_06_01_archive.php
  2. Ziauddin Sardar, 'The Namesake: futures, futures studies, futurology, futuristic, foresight - what's in a name?' Futures 42:3 April 2010.
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