I have spent over a decade in academic research, beginning with a research assistant post at the University of Sheffield (UK) which turned into a PhD in Infrastructure Futures & Theory, and culminated in a number of postdoctoral projects in southern Sweden, including a prestigious Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellowship undertaken at Lund University.
You can explore my academic career on these pages:
As part of my doctoral research, I spent five years thinking very hard about how change happens: about the inextricable social and technological conditions for change, and the interacting drivers thereof. This question of change is, for me, the central question of all futures and foresight work: no change means no difference, which means no future.
In my postdoctoral work, my focus shifted, as I picked up the creative and quantitative approaches to thinking about (infrastructure) futures from my PhD, and developed them into a methodology known as “narrative prototyping” for exploring and communicating climate futures. Many of my academic publications are open-access and linked directly from this website; you can also see my citation scores and other metrics on my G**gle Scholar profile.
For almost as long as I was an academic, I was also doing commercial and fourth-sector (i.e. non-profit) work as a consulting researcher, often (but not always) on futures-focussed projects; it is to this sort of work that I am once again turning my hand, through my company Magrathea Framtider AB. Some examples of my research work can be seen below.
Researcher
-
LU Magazine (2041 Jubilee Issue)
A small team of researchers managed to pitch the idea of a narrative prototype which would explore a possible future for Lund University in a familiar and accessible format.
-
The Rough Planet Guide to Zero-Carbon Skåne
The Rough Planet Guide to Zero-Carbon Skåne is a website-based travel guide (of sorts) to Skåne. Not the Skåne of the present, though—rather, a possible Skåne of around 2045 or so.
-
The Rough Planet Guide to Notterdam 2045
RPGN emerged from the decision to write not for policymakers alone, but for a more general audience: how might we communicate the possibilities of decarbonisation to non-experts?
-
Instant Archetypes
The Instant Archetypes card deck emerged as a response to that period in the late-mid Twentyteens when it seemed every futures and design fiction outfit was releasing some sort of card-based brainstorming or workshopping tool.