Routledge Handbook of Social Futures
Herausgeber: López Galviz, Carlos; Spiers, Emily
Routledge Handbook of Social Futures
Herausgeber: López Galviz, Carlos; Spiers, Emily
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Featuring chapters from an international range of leading and emerging scholars, this Handbook provides a collection of cutting-edge, interdisciplinary research that sheds new light on contemporary futures studies.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- John NagleSocial Movements in Violently Divided Societies183,99 €
- The Routledge Handbook on Responsibility in International Relations258,99 €
- Greg MartinUnderstanding Social Movements225,99 €
- Media and Democracy in the Middle East182,99 €
- Nicola Montagna / Vincenzo Ruggiero (eds.)Social Movements246,99 €
- Emanuel De KadtSociology and Development161,99 €
- Sarah Deardorff MillerPolitical and Humanitarian Responses to Syrian Displacement81,99 €
-
-
-
Featuring chapters from an international range of leading and emerging scholars, this Handbook provides a collection of cutting-edge, interdisciplinary research that sheds new light on contemporary futures studies.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 360
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. November 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 776g
- ISBN-13: 9781138340336
- ISBN-10: 1138340332
- Artikelnr.: 62275957
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 360
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. November 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 776g
- ISBN-13: 9781138340336
- ISBN-10: 1138340332
- Artikelnr.: 62275957
Carlos López Galviz, PhD, is Senior Lecturer in the Theories and Methods of Social Futures at Lancaster University, UK. His books include Global Undergrounds (2016) and Cities, Railways, Modernities: London, Paris and the Nineteenth Century (2019). Emily Spiers, PhD, is Senior Lecturer in Creative Futures at Lancaster University, UK. They are the author of Pop-Feminist Narratives: The Female Subject under Neoliberalism in North America, Britain and Germany (2018) and the co-editor, with Tobias Boes and Rebecca Braun of World Authorship (2020).
Introduction: Why social futures? 1. A beginning: A critical history of
scenarios 2. Agency: Futures literacy and Generation Z 3. AI: The social
future of intelligence 4. Anticipation: Flourishing for the future 5.
BioFutures: Where futurists and biologists meet 6. Borders: Retravelling
Nickelsdorf 7. Climate change: Transformational adaptation in Bangladesh 8.
Collaboration: Collaborative future-making 9. Data: The futures of personal
data 10. Ecology: Thinking ecologically 11. Economics: Catalysing
large-scale system change 12. Family: Homeland connections and family
futures 13. Higher education: The future university 14. Inquiries:
Healthcare futures 15. Lines: Material cultures of future mobility 16.
Literary futures: What fiction can tell policy makers 17. Mental health:
What can social futures teach us? 18. Mobility justice: Sustainable
mobility futures 19. Multi-planetary worlds: Mobilities of the space age
20. Narrative: Telling social futures 21. Postcolonial futures: Urban
eventualities 22. Prospection: Producing social futures 23. Publics:
Infrastructuring proto-futures 24. Queering: Liberation futures with
Afrofuturism 25. Smart cities: Policy without polity 26. Urbanism: Creating
urban futures 27. Utopia: Futurity, realism and the social 28. Visible
cities: Envisioning social futures 29. Walking futures: Following in the
footsteps of mobility pioneers
scenarios 2. Agency: Futures literacy and Generation Z 3. AI: The social
future of intelligence 4. Anticipation: Flourishing for the future 5.
BioFutures: Where futurists and biologists meet 6. Borders: Retravelling
Nickelsdorf 7. Climate change: Transformational adaptation in Bangladesh 8.
Collaboration: Collaborative future-making 9. Data: The futures of personal
data 10. Ecology: Thinking ecologically 11. Economics: Catalysing
large-scale system change 12. Family: Homeland connections and family
futures 13. Higher education: The future university 14. Inquiries:
Healthcare futures 15. Lines: Material cultures of future mobility 16.
Literary futures: What fiction can tell policy makers 17. Mental health:
What can social futures teach us? 18. Mobility justice: Sustainable
mobility futures 19. Multi-planetary worlds: Mobilities of the space age
20. Narrative: Telling social futures 21. Postcolonial futures: Urban
eventualities 22. Prospection: Producing social futures 23. Publics:
Infrastructuring proto-futures 24. Queering: Liberation futures with
Afrofuturism 25. Smart cities: Policy without polity 26. Urbanism: Creating
urban futures 27. Utopia: Futurity, realism and the social 28. Visible
cities: Envisioning social futures 29. Walking futures: Following in the
footsteps of mobility pioneers
Introduction: Why social futures? 1. A beginning: A critical history of
scenarios 2. Agency: Futures literacy and Generation Z 3. AI: The social
future of intelligence 4. Anticipation: Flourishing for the future 5.
BioFutures: Where futurists and biologists meet 6. Borders: Retravelling
Nickelsdorf 7. Climate change: Transformational adaptation in Bangladesh 8.
Collaboration: Collaborative future-making 9. Data: The futures of personal
data 10. Ecology: Thinking ecologically 11. Economics: Catalysing
large-scale system change 12. Family: Homeland connections and family
futures 13. Higher education: The future university 14. Inquiries:
Healthcare futures 15. Lines: Material cultures of future mobility 16.
Literary futures: What fiction can tell policy makers 17. Mental health:
What can social futures teach us? 18. Mobility justice: Sustainable
mobility futures 19. Multi-planetary worlds: Mobilities of the space age
20. Narrative: Telling social futures 21. Postcolonial futures: Urban
eventualities 22. Prospection: Producing social futures 23. Publics:
Infrastructuring proto-futures 24. Queering: Liberation futures with
Afrofuturism 25. Smart cities: Policy without polity 26. Urbanism: Creating
urban futures 27. Utopia: Futurity, realism and the social 28. Visible
cities: Envisioning social futures 29. Walking futures: Following in the
footsteps of mobility pioneers
scenarios 2. Agency: Futures literacy and Generation Z 3. AI: The social
future of intelligence 4. Anticipation: Flourishing for the future 5.
BioFutures: Where futurists and biologists meet 6. Borders: Retravelling
Nickelsdorf 7. Climate change: Transformational adaptation in Bangladesh 8.
Collaboration: Collaborative future-making 9. Data: The futures of personal
data 10. Ecology: Thinking ecologically 11. Economics: Catalysing
large-scale system change 12. Family: Homeland connections and family
futures 13. Higher education: The future university 14. Inquiries:
Healthcare futures 15. Lines: Material cultures of future mobility 16.
Literary futures: What fiction can tell policy makers 17. Mental health:
What can social futures teach us? 18. Mobility justice: Sustainable
mobility futures 19. Multi-planetary worlds: Mobilities of the space age
20. Narrative: Telling social futures 21. Postcolonial futures: Urban
eventualities 22. Prospection: Producing social futures 23. Publics:
Infrastructuring proto-futures 24. Queering: Liberation futures with
Afrofuturism 25. Smart cities: Policy without polity 26. Urbanism: Creating
urban futures 27. Utopia: Futurity, realism and the social 28. Visible
cities: Envisioning social futures 29. Walking futures: Following in the
footsteps of mobility pioneers