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Future public policy and its knowledge base: shaping worldviews through counterfactual world-making

Per-Anders Hillgren, Ann Light, Michael Strange

2020Policy Design and Practice29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Research in diverse areas such as climate change, happiness and wellbeing emphasizes the need for transformative change, stressing the importance of rethinking established values, goals and paradigms prevailing among civil servants, policy- and decision makers. In this paper, we discuss a role that design can play in this, especially how processes of counterfactual world-making can help facilitate reflection on worldviews and the shape of future forms of governance. By exploring different presents, rather than conditions in the future, this approach allows civil servants to consider, create and resist playful alternatives to business-as-usual. In this way, we demonstrate how design can stimulate imagination both as to futures and people’s role in shaping these futures.

Topics & Concepts

Counterfactual thinkingTransformative learningFutures contractDeliberationHappinessCorporate governancePolitical scienceEnvironmental ethicsSociologyPublic relationsEconomicsSocial psychologyPsychologyManagementLawPoliticsFinancial economicsPhilosophyPedagogyInnovative Human-Technology InteractionParticipatory Visual Research MethodsCommunity Health and Development