TY - JOUR
T1 - Everyday laboratories: Collective speculation and energy futures
AU - Samanani, Farhan
AU - Knox, Hannah
AU - Costanza, Enrico
AU - Panagiotidou, Georgia
AU - Fell, Mike
AU - Potapov, Kyrill
PY - 2025/3/26
Y1 - 2025/3/26
N2 - Growing public concern surrounding climate change has not always led to better public knowledge of what might constitute effective action, while growing knowledge does not always produce greater concern. We argue that this gap between knowledge and concern is reproduced by prevailing practices for anticipating energy futures – including those associated with top-down modelling and forecasting, and those attempting to imagine or infer alternative futures from the bottom up. In response, we develop a concept of ‘collective speculation’, inspired in particular by the work of Bruno Latour. Collective speculation, we argue, strives to create common futures by attending to diverse interests and affordances in order to cultivate connections between different forms of knowledge, political concerns, actors and worlds. We illustrate and unpack this concept by exploring our own practice as researchers working on a project using sensors and data visualization to explore collective responses to climate change. We trace practices of collective speculation within the workings of the team itself, as well as across our relations with a key partner and the everyday worlds of our participants, in order to show how collective speculation generates collectives animated by interconnected forms of concern and knowledge.
AB - Growing public concern surrounding climate change has not always led to better public knowledge of what might constitute effective action, while growing knowledge does not always produce greater concern. We argue that this gap between knowledge and concern is reproduced by prevailing practices for anticipating energy futures – including those associated with top-down modelling and forecasting, and those attempting to imagine or infer alternative futures from the bottom up. In response, we develop a concept of ‘collective speculation’, inspired in particular by the work of Bruno Latour. Collective speculation, we argue, strives to create common futures by attending to diverse interests and affordances in order to cultivate connections between different forms of knowledge, political concerns, actors and worlds. We illustrate and unpack this concept by exploring our own practice as researchers working on a project using sensors and data visualization to explore collective responses to climate change. We trace practices of collective speculation within the workings of the team itself, as well as across our relations with a key partner and the everyday worlds of our participants, in order to show how collective speculation generates collectives animated by interconnected forms of concern and knowledge.
U2 - 10.1016/j.futures.2025.103594
DO - 10.1016/j.futures.2025.103594
M3 - Article
SN - 0016-3287
VL - 170
JO - Futures
JF - Futures
M1 - 103594
ER -