Research
- Research Programmes
- Research Infrastructure
- Research Projects
- 5xPRO Consortium of Project Management Offices for Strengthening Excellence, Interdisciplinarity and
- Financial Networks in the Shadow of Economic Nationalism: A Comparative Study of the Territories of
- The SPOZNAJ Project
- The Changing Discursive Semantics of EU Representations: Identity, Populism, Propaganda
- Analysis of and Responses to Extremist Narratives (ARENAS)
- Slovenian Verbal Valency: Syntax, Semantics, and Use
- Systems of care and education of children with sensory disabilities in the first and second Yugoslav
- Everyday life and life course of old people living in poverty
- Prospects and Boundaries of International Friendship: Polish-Yugoslav Relations between 1956 and 196
- Sin, Shame, Symptom: suicide and its perceptions in Slovenia (1850–2000)
- Slovenian history on a small scale. Continuity and change in a village community in a long-term pers
- Urban Futures: Imagining and Activating Possibilities in Unsettled Times
- Etnografija tišin(e)
- Cultural-historical aspects of senescence: experiences, representations, identities
- Creating, maintaining, reusing:border commissions as the key for understanding contemporary borders
- Completed Projects
- Visiting Fellowship Program
Urban Futures
Imagining and Activating Possibilities in Unsettled Times
Code: J6-2578
Sponsors: Javna agencija za raziskovalno dejavnost Republike Slovenije (ARRS), Hrvatska zaklada za znanost
Period: November 1, 2020 – October 31, 2024
Head: dr. Saša Poljak Istenič
Partners and researchers involved:
- Institute of Contemporary History: dr. Nina Vodopivec
- University of Primorska, Faculty of Humanities: dr. Katja Hrobat Virloget
- Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts: dr. Tatjana Bajuk Senčar, dr. Miha Kozorog, dr. Saša Poljak Istenič
The future influences the present just as much as the past, Friedrich Nietzsche pointed out more than a century ago. This fact is currently demonstrated in movements searching for a better future as well as in global, European, national, and local developmental strategies. Even though the future has historically not been an explicit focus of ethnological/anthropological research, grassroots appeals to the future have recently inspired a shift in disciplinary focus.
This project is dedicated to in-depth research of future-making in selected Slovenian and Croatian cities. Future-making refers to a comprehensive understanding of elements which are combined in imagining, anticipating and perceiving futures – cognitively, discursively, and affectively – as well as in modalities of everyday life and engagement that contain a particular relationship towards futures. “Future” as a (novel) object of study in ethnological/cultural anthropological terms is considered culturally and contextually dependant. Together with the notions of probabilities and possibilities which are immanent to future, it sets the stage for researching multiple urban futures – desired and undesired, official and alternative, supported and resisted, contested, challenged, as well as invisible, “silenced”, or “stolen”.
The process of urban future-making will be analysed from top-down (strategic documents and visions of particular cities) and bottom-up (civil associations and initiatives) perspectives, as well as from individual/personal perspectives (experiences, expectations, practices, particularly of young people). The project is firmly grounded in ethnography and discourse analysis. It is structured around three axes of research: public space (future-oriented spatial-social urban projects and their potential to enhance social integration, inclusion, health, and wellbeing for urban citizens); creativity and innovations (creative hubs developed by various actors to build and promote good practices, education, and social engagement envisioning futures); and civic participation (diverse ways in which citizens enact “the right to the city”, contributing to current debates on effective urban governance as a prerequisite of liveable and sustainable urban futures).
The project team consists of ten researchers – five researchers from each country – with an established history of collaboration. Combining their expertise, the project seeks to establish a wider network for comparative ethnological/cultural anthropological (urban) futures research. It will demonstrate that globally small, marginal, and “ordinary” cities, such as those in Slovenia and Croatia, represent a challenging site for urban futures research and contribute to advancing in urban studies theory. By being the first mid-term bilateral cooperation between Slovenian and Croatian ethnologists/anthropologists since the countries’ independence, it is also expected to strengthen cross-border academic collaboration, orient ethnology/anthropology in both countries towards studying futures