The WFSF since its inception has encouraged and supported a pluralistic approach to futures studies. This pluralism will be reflected in the diversity of resources developed within this project.
Although thinking about the future has always been a part of human culture (e.g., soothsayers, prophets, and later 'utopians') it has only been in the past four to five decades that it has produced the academic research field known as Future Studies. The WFSF uses the plural term “futures” studies rather than the singular “future” studies to counter the notion of only one future, the latter having both conceptual limitations and political implications. This pluralisation of futures opens up the territory for envisioning and creating alternative and preferred futures.
While it is commonly thought that futures studies is an attempt to predict the future based on extrapolation from present day trends, this is only one of at least five approaches to futures research described below.
There are many ways that the development of the futures studies field could be characterised. One broad contextual approach is to identify five traditions currently operating within the field, each of which represents different epistemological, or even ideological, underpinnings.
These are not mutually exclusive approaches, nor should this contextualisation imply a linear developmental model. These are all suitable pathways to futures research and pedagogy depending on the context. Well-informed futures researchers and educators may utilise any or all of these traditions depending on their operational context.
4th European Futurists Conference: Lucerne - October 26 - 28, 2008
© 2007 California State University
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