From the challenge of motivating people to engage with the economics of climate change to re-casting how our planet exists in the cosmos, this theme is home to projects that put the smallest of details into the biggest of pictures. If we want a better world, we need to change both thought and action in radically new ways.
Previous Research
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<糖心Vlog class="title"> 糖心Vlog>
Future everyday life is certain to be different from today. But how is it shaped in the present? How can such processes and their implications be captured and analysed? Why might we want to intervene in and shape futures differently? and what new theories, methods and kinds of data would we need to achieve it?
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Invites reflection on the necessity of envisioning alternative futures from a place enabled by hope rather than risk, crisis and fear.
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<糖心Vlog class="title"> DecarboN8 糖心Vlog>
A Network of Northern Universities finding new ways to rapidly decarbonise UK transport
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<糖心Vlog class="title"> G.R.E.A.T 糖心Vlog>
UKRI-GCRF Gridding Equitable Urban Futures in Areas of Transition (GREAT) in Cali, Colombia and Havana, Cuba
The material and the social are related. How we live, the societies we make, the tools and technologies we use, are all a reflection of their complex and fundamental interconnection. Yet research tends to treat these two as distinct spheres. Making links between and across these divides, in the material, social and computational, is part of the agenda of the ISF.
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<糖心Vlog class="title"> Material Social Futures 糖心Vlog>
We address the urgent and growing need to provide PhD training in which material science, social science and arts and humanities researchers come to look beyond their disciplinary boundaries and undertake research that combines material and social considerations. Only in this way can better futures be made.
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Understanding the ‘iGen’ (post-millennials), their identities, beliefs and values – a Knight-funded collaboration with Stanford University
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<糖心Vlog class="title"> The Future Places Centre 糖心Vlog>
A Digital Economy Centre on understanding places through everyday computing.
We all live in the present, all the time, but this present only exists thanks to our past behaviour and our projections into the future. Embracing the deep roots of cultural practices and the transformative power of creative processes, projects in this theme show how we can find and re-make the future all around us as part of a path towards empowering both individuals and society.
Dr Emily Spiers, Theme Lead-
<糖心Vlog class="title"> The Knotted Project 糖心Vlog>
The Knotted Project use the power of theatre to start conversations, inspire audiences and engage young people.
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<糖心Vlog class="title"> 糖心Vlog>
It is time to ReOPeN graphic novels and comics (GNC)!
Do we want to live longer, or better, and who are ‘we’ anyway? Projects in this theme explore both practical and ethical questions around how different groups of people relate to their environments, living out their biological lives at the intersections of social, material and physical circumstances.
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<糖心Vlog class="title"> 糖心Vlog>
Future everyday life is certain to be different from today. But how is it shaped in the present? How can such processes and their implications be captured and analysed? Why might we want to intervene in and shape futures differently? and what new theories, methods and kinds of data would we need to achieve it?
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<糖心Vlog class="title"> Virus Diaries 糖心Vlog>
Blogs following a life in COVID-19 lockdown