The Futures Workshop

Victoria Mulligan

A series of conversations with the world's leading futurists about how to use the tools they've created. thefuturesworkshop.substack.com

  1. 19 Apr

    Season Two, Episode One: Alice Dimond

    Kia ora workshoppers! We’re back after a big break and kicking off a new season with Alice Dimond of Ngāi Tahu, a South Island Iwi (tribe) from Aotearoa New Zealand. Alice talks to us about Te Korekoreka, a Māori approach to futures that she and her Iwi have developed to connect their people through the “four realms of creation”. Like other tools we’ve explored, this one uses metaphor and story but with a uniquely indigenous approach - where past, present and future exist simultaneously. As Alice explains, we stand connected to our ancestors and descendants through time but the connection is not linear, it is ever-present. Even if you haven’t caught up on all of our previous episodes this is a fantastic one to begin with. For New Zealanders it’s a rare insight into how Māori conceptualise the future; for internationals, it’s a wonderful introduction to this special aspect of Aotearoa. Thanks to Alice, thank you for listening and as always thanks to The Beths for supplying our beautiful theme music! Victoria ________________________________________________________________ For more information about Te Korekoreka, visit the website here. To find out more about Alice’s latest project to empower young people with innovative and future focused approaches to creating solutions to the challenges of our world, visit Mō Āpōpō Future-Makers. You can find Alice on LinkedIn here. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thefuturesworkshop.substack.com

    42 min
  2. 15/02/2025

    Episode Thirteen: Andrew Curry on Futures Landscapes

    Kia ora and welcome to episode thirteen of The Futures Workshop! Most of the tools we’ve looked at so far rely on scenarios - imagined future scenes which we then use to work out the implications for us and our organisations. But today’s guest Andrew Curry says scenarios aren’t always the best approach. It can be cognitively tricky to get groups to fully embrace a speculative future and make the leap to where they fit into it. Sometimes, says Andrew, it’s better to stay in what he calls the “thick present”, using a tool known as Futures Landscapes. Andrew is another significant voice in our global futures community. He is the director of Futures at the School of International Futures, and has led projects that span everything from net zero mobility to the impacts of geopolitical events on food and energy. We hope you enjoy this episode on the Futures Landscapes tool. You can find some of the resources Andrew refers to below. Thanks to The Beths and (The Boss) for their beautiful music. Further resources: An abstract on Futures Landscapes which Andrew created for the Discovery of the Future conference https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aaid:sc:EU:0123fb5a-75aa-4f5d-8b4d-6450f21d35df An urban food environments report to show how the tool might work in practice. Andrew tells me that the ‘domains’ part is a little harder to find in this report, but they are listed out on p13 and the supporting systems loops and analysis are at the back as an Annex https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aaid:sc:EU:0fc744c1-7940-40a0-988b-1581f2b21d78 This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thefuturesworkshop.substack.com

    51 min

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A series of conversations with the world's leading futurists about how to use the tools they've created. thefuturesworkshop.substack.com