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      The future as a public good: decolonising the future through anticipatory participatory action research

      , ,
      foresight
      Emerald

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          The purpose of this paper is to nurture reflections on the colonization of the future in the present with a particular focus on Africa. This paper aims at exploring how participatory research and particularly anticipatory action research can contribute to a decolonising process.

          Design/methodology/approach

          Considering the future as a public good, this paper develops a reflection on the colonization processes that can turn it into a club or a private good. This paper mobilizes the notions of participatory knowledge production and local action research as a way to decolonize the future and empower imagination. This paper revisits the tenets of participatory action research as a means to achieve this objective and discusses the main features of a non-colonial anticipatory action research in the context of African futures.

          Findings

          This paper highlights the challenges associated with connecting anticipatory endeavours focusing on action research, the creation of collective intelligence and co-design, with the intention of encouraging the decolonisation process. It includes design principles and anticipates a possible process of counter-decolonization.

          Research limitations/implications

          This is a conceptual paper, which does not provide field-tested evidence. Yet, the authors hope it serves as an input enabling to design methodologies that will prevent the colonisation of the future when engaging in future-oriented research activities in Africa and elsewhere.

          Originality/value

          This paper provides an integral approach to the colonisation of the future, as a renewed old question. This paper also connects this process with a reflection on the nature of what could be non-colonizing anticipatory action research.

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          Most cited references81

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          Action Research and Minority Problems

          Kurt Lewin (1946)
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            Photovoice: Concept, Methodology, and Use for Participatory Needs Assessment

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              Review of community-based research: assessing partnership approaches to improve public health.

              Community-based research in public health focuses on social, structural, and physical environmental inequities through active involvement of community members, organizational representatives, and researchers in all aspects of the research process. Partners contribute their expertise to enhance understanding of a given phenomenon and to integrate the knowledge gained with action to benefit the community involved. This review provides a synthesis of key principles of community-based research, examines its place within the context of different scientific paradigms, discusses rationales for its use, and explores major challenges and facilitating factors and their implications for conducting effective community-based research aimed at improving the public's health.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                foresight
                FS
                Emerald
                1463-6689
                1463-6689
                August 01 2022
                August 01 2022
                Article
                10.1108/FS-11-2021-0225
                60bd0e3d-bc59-4840-91fa-4daec09c9323
                © 2022

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