Edited by Nicola Spurling and Lenneke Kuijer.
Nine essays plus an introduction on Everyday Futures as an Area of Research can be downloaded by free in the website of the Institute for Social Futures.
A quick view of the table of contents:
Introduction: Everyday Futures as an Area of Research
Nicola Spurling (Lancaster University) and Lenneke Kuijer (TU Eindhoven)
“The future is already here — it’s just not very evenly distributed.”
Tim Chatterton (University of the West of England) and Georgia Newmarch (Lancaster University)
Everyday Futures and Ethnographic Methods
Jill Ebrey (University of Manchester) and Isabelle Moussaoui (EDF R&D, Paris)
Futuring Fashion from Everyday Life
Lizzie Harrison (University of Arts, London) and Angella Mackey (TU Eindhoven)
Imagined Futures of the Circular Economy
Daniel Welch (University of Manchester), Margit Keller (University of Tartu) and Giuliana Mandich (University of Cagliari)
Grow Your Own: space, planning, practice and everyday futures of domestic food production
Enrico Marcore (University of Aberdeen) and Nicola Spurling (Lancaster University)
Going Digital: digital tools and the study of everyday home life
Tjerk Timan (Tilburg University) and Katherine Ellsworth-Krebs (University of St Andrews)
Connecting Past, Present and Future
Rebecca Wright (University of London) and Colin Pooley (Lancaster University)
“By Their [Data] You Will Know Them”: Historical reflections on capturing patterns in everyday life
Derek Gatherer (Lancaster University), Lenneke Kuijer (TU Eindhoven) and Ida Nilstad Pettersen (NTNU Norway)
Future Making as Collective Composition: towards an inclusive design of smart cities
Maureen Meadows (Coventry University) and Matthijs Kouw (Rhatenau Institute, The Hague)