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==Papers==

*Defending the future: Introductory overview of a special issue of On the Horizon on responses to The Biggest Wake-Up Call in History, On The Horizon, Vol 21, No 3, 2013, pp. 168-173:
[http://richardslaughter.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/Defending_the_Future.pdf Defending the future]
*Welcome to the anthropocene, Futures, Vol 44, 2012, pp. 119-126. [http://richardslaughter.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/Welcome_to_Anthropocene.pdf Welcome to anthropocene]
*Responding to a planetary emergency, Futures Vol 44, 2012, pp. 273-276. [http://richardslaughter.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/RS_Planetary_Emergency_Futs_2012.pdf Planetary Emergency]
*Sense making, futures work and the global emergency, Foresight Vol 14, No 5, 2012, pp. 418-431. [http://richardslaughter.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/RS_Sense_making_2012.pdf RS Sense making]
*Making headway during impossible times, Journal of Integral Theory and Practice, Vol 7, No 3, 2012, pp. 128-138: [http://richardslaughter.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/Making_Headway_JITP_041213.pdf Making headway imposible times]

*Integral Futures, in Curry, A. (ed) The Future of Futures, Association of Professional Futurists, Houston, TX, 2012, pp. 28-32. http://integralfutures.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Integral_Futures_APF_Overview_2012.pdf

*The integral futures controversy: an introduction, Journal of Integral Theory and Practice, Vol 6, No 2, 2011, pp. 105-111. [http://integralfutures.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/RS_JITP_Intro.pdf Integral futures controversy]

*Responding to a global megacrisis, Journal of Futures Studies, 16, 2, December 2011, pp 111-114. [http://richardslaughter.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/RS_Responding_to_Global_Megacrisis_JFS_2011.pdf Global magacrisis]

*(The white terns of Lord Howe Island, Wingspan, Birds Australia, Melbourne, Vol 20, No 2, June 2010, pp. 20-23.)

*Evaluating overshoot and collapse futures, World Future Review, Vol 2, No 4, 2010, pp. 5-18. Available at: [http://richardslaughter.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/Eval_Collapse_WFR_AugSep2010.pdf Evaluating collapse]

*Understanding and resolving the global problematique: Assessing the balance between progressive and socially conservative foresight, Foresight, Vol. 11, No 5, 2009, pp. 21-39. (With Chris Riedy) [http://richardslaughter.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/RS_CR_Problematique.pdf Resolving the global problematique]


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 18:06, 20 December 2013

Dr Richard Slaughter
Richard Slaughter
Richard Slaughter
BornRichard Slaughter
Late 1940
London, London
OccupationProfessor/Author
NationalityEngland
EducationLancaster University, PhD. Future Studies,1982
Subjectfuture studies, journalism Integral perspective, Books, Social Innovation
Literary movementFuture Studies
Notable worksDirector at Foresight International
Foundation professor at Foresight International
published 20 Books (Future Studies) Future resource books
SpouseJill
Website
http://authors-unlimited.org/author/richard-slaughter

Richard Slaughter (born late 1940s, England) is a co-director of Foresight International, a preeminent scholar in the field of Futures Studies and applied foresight, and a prolific author with over 20 books to his name specialising in Future Studies, Integral perspectives and social innovation. Slaughter has also guest edited a number of journals including: Futures, Foresight, Futures Research Quarterly and World Studies Journal. He is widely known for his work in four areas:

  • developing the theory and practice of futures in education
  • leading the transition from empirical to critical futures work
  • bringing Integral theory into futures; hence Integral Futures; and,
  • working with others to stimulate effective responses to the global emergency created, in part, by the confluence of peak oil and global warming.

Life and work

Slaughters first steps towards a career in Futures Studies began with his interest in the long-running Dan Dare series in the British boy’s comic, Eagle. During the late 1950s and early 1960s the lead artist, Frank Hampson, depicted a future world that was, on the whole, bright and optimistic. The fascination with futuristic fiction continued into Slaughter's teenage years, whereupon he was confronted by the prevalence of dystopias. His educational experiences at school and college in the UK were not entirely satisfying since the curriculum followed by his teachers and lecturers implicitly gave greater importance to past events than to any considerations of the future. This seemed inappropriate for young people who would be living in the 21st century, and so he felt that something needed to change. He also discovered a book that helped to shape his life thereafter: A Runaway World, by Edmund Leach (Reith Lectures, 1967, BBC, London).

From 1969-1975, Slaughter took up residence in Bermuda with his wife Jill. There he opened up to the natural world in part through David Wingate, the government conservation officer at the time, and also produced his first book Birds in Bermuda (Bermuda Book Stores, 1975). He noted that even in this unique group of sub-tropical islands there was little concern for the future. It had become a teeming mid-ocean metropolis and US military base. Protests and preservation efforts appeared to have little effect. Stimulated and also saddened by these experiences, Slaughter moved back to England with his wife and began to pursue a bachelor's degree that incorporated some aspects of Futures Studies at the School of Independent Studies at Lancaster University. There he developed a work program for himself titled “Science, Technology, and the Human Future.” After achieving a first class honours degree in 1978, Slaughter began his post-graduate work at Lancaster in the Department of Educational Research under the supervision of John Reynolds from 1978-1982.

While Slaughter was working on his PhD, he helped to raise his two sons, Rohan and Lorien, with his wife. His father died in 1982. The academic world tolerated Slaughter's enthusiasm for future studies but was not greatly interested in supporting it. He successfully completed his PhD thesis and oral exam, after which he devoted his time and efforts towards refashioning parts of his thesis into a publishable form. He simultaneously read a variety of literature relating to the human condition, including the works of Lewis Mumford, Hannah Arendt, Aldous Huxley and Ken Wilber. Slaughter's work to promote future studies in educational settings began during his graduate work at Lancaster, where he taught an option for futures study and curriculum design within the Master's program. He began to get his work published in the journals Foundation and Futures . During this time he also developed a course for futures studies and penned a corresponding textbook, titled “Futures Tools and Techniques”.

After several years of travel, lectures, and publication, Slaughter was hired as a lecturer in futures and social education in the Institute of Education at the University of Melbourne. During that time Slaughter wrote the books Future Concepts and Powerful Ideas and The Foresight Principle. He also co-wrote Education for the 21st Century with Professor Hedley Beare. After his five-year contract came to an end, while still in Melbourne, he set up the Futures Study Centre and worked as an independent writer, editor and occasional consultant. It was early during this period that he edited the three-volume work of futures literature The Knowledge Base of Futures Studies (KBFS). This went through several book and CD-ROM editions, the last of which was published in 2005. In 1998 he was commissioned with Adolph Hanich by the Vice Chancellor of Swinburne University of Technology to draft a feasibility study that led to the establishment of the Australian Foresight Institute in 1999. Slaughter was offered and accepted a professorial fellowship to lead the institute in that year. During 2001 to 2005 he also served as the President of the World Futures Studies Federation. In 2004, Slaughter left the AFI to set up Foresight International. Since then he has edited and written further books and journals, as well as many papers. He has produced new CD-ROM materials, developed new web-based resources and continued working in the field of Futures Studies.

Evolution of a disciplinary perspective

From forecasting to integral futures

When Slaughter was researching his PhD (Critical Futures Study and Curriculum Renewal, Univ. of Lancaster, 1982) the dominant themes of the futures literature were focused on methods such as trend analysis and forecasting. Slaughter’s work, however, drew attention to the ways that human and social factors had been widely overlooked in empirically based approaches. This led to his proposals for ‘critical’ modes of enquiry that incorporated these factors. At the same time scenario building was coming into wide use. While Slaughter acknowledged the value of scenarios that allowed practitioners to better explore divergence in the forward view, he felt that something was missing. What that ‘something’ emerged in two stages. First through the development of critical futures studies that itself drew on critical traditions and sources of enquiry. Second, through the Integral project that was emerging from the work of Ken Wilber emerged over a couple of decades. Whereas Slaughter had brought social factors into futures methods, the Integral perspective introduced an extended account of human and social development based on the work of developmental psychologists. It was from such sources that Slaughter proposed to up-date and expand the range of futures methods by drawing on and applying them within a futures context; hence Integral Futures. While this led to some early concerns within the futures community, one of the prizes awarded to Slaughter by the Association of Professional Futurists (APF) was for a special issue of the journal.


Strategic to social foresight

During his five years at the Australian Foresight Institute Slaughter had situated the notion of Strategic Foresight at the heart of the Masters Program offered at Swinburne University. It was his view that ‘foresight refreshes strategy.’ This formulation later became standard throughout the world and remains in wide use today. Over time, however, Slaughter became dissatisfied with the term, coming to believe that it applied most adequately within organisations. At that point he began to think and write about extending the concept into that of Social Foresight which he conceptualised as a society-wide awakening to the implications of major futures concerns (such as peak oil, global warming and the 6th extinction) that were already beginning to be acknowledged more widely. His book Futures Beyond Dystopia: Creating Social Foresight (Routledge, London, 2004) provided a rationale and foundation for this approach and was favourably reviewed in a number of publications.

The global emergency and descent futures

Since leaving academia in 2004 Slaughter continued to travel, write and research. During this time it became increasingly clear to him that humanity was steadily heading into what he considered to be a trap of its own making. The Limits to Growth project had addressed many of the main issues – particularly those pertaining to the impossibility of endless growth within a finite system – but had been widely ignored. So he spent a couple of years gathering material and subsequently published The Biggest Wake-Up Call in History (Foresight International, Brisbane, 2010). This set out his view of where humanity was headed and also won a Most Important Futures Work award from the APF. The book did not simply outline ‘the problem’ it also considered a variety of strategies for responding to what he saw as a growing global emergency. Two years later he followed this work with an anthology of some of his shorter work called To See With Fresh Eyes: Integral Futures and the Global Emergency (Foresight International, Brisbane, 2012). Both books have since been published as ebooks

Within the futures / foresight field there has long been strong support for the view that people find up-beat, positive futures more compelling that darker and Dystopian ones. While acknowledging the validity of this view, Slaughter’s more recent work has suggested that an open and honest look at where the world is headed suggests very strongly that disastrous outcomes are becoming much more likely. He has further suggested that the process of coming to terms with such futures can also be highly motivating and spur people into action. Currently his view is that the ‘double whammy’ of peak oil and climate disruption are set to wreak large and uncontrollable changes upon humanity for which, despite all warnings and ‘signals of change’, humanity is ill-prepared to deal with. In this context he considers that social foresight needs to become a mainstream project focused on the growing likelihood of social collapse on a wide scale. His preferred strategy, however, is to move from a ‘collapse’ narrative to one of ‘descent’ within which many options for human choice and effective action are retained and enacted. To this end he has co-edited a double issue of the UK journal Foresight on the theme of ‘descent pathways.’

While the road ahead remains extremely challenging, Slaughter’s overall view is that the future still remains to be created. Disastrous, overshoot-and-collapse futures are, in his view, consequences of business-as-usual thinking. But there are many other options to explore. This is consistent with a view that Slaughter has held throughout his career. He has sought to challenge passive acceptance of the status quo and the fatalism it engenders by showing that ‘the future is a principle of present action.’

Awards and recognition

2006 – The 2005 CD-ROM version of The Knowledge Base of Futures Studies was voted one of the ‘most important futures works of 2008’ by the Association of Professional Futurists.[1] 2009 – Special issue of Futures on Integral Futures voted one of the ‘most important futures works of 2008’ by the Association of Professional Futurists.[1] 2010 - Voted one of the world’s ‘all-time best futurists’ by the Foresight Network, Shaping Tomorrow[2]

2012 – The Biggest Wake-Up Call in History voted as one of the ‘most important futures works of 2008’ by the Association of Professional Futurists. The relevant award category was that of ‘published works that analyse a significant futures issue.’[1]

Australian Foresight Institute / Strategic Foresight Program

Founded in 1999 at the Swinburne University of Technology, the Australian Foresight Institute was designed as a specialized research and post-graduate teaching unit. The original aims of the institute were to provide a global resource centre for strategic foresight, create and deliver world class professional programs, carry out original research into the nature and uses of foresight, focus on the implementation of foresight in organizations, and work toward the emergence of social foresight in Australia.[3]

A research program on Creating and Sustaining Social Foresight was funded and supported by the Pratt Foundation and produced a series of leading edge monographs.[4]

The institute was disestablished in 2005, with the teaching program subsumed into Swinburne University of Technology's Faculty of Business and Enterprise, with the new name of The Strategic Foresight Program.

Books

  • Slaughter, R. A. Birds in Bermuda. Bermuda Bookstores Ltd., Hamilton, Bermuda: ix + 158pp (1975) With photographs by the author. No ISBN. Foreword by David Wingate, Government Conservation Officer. (Book Birds of bermuda)[5]
  • Slaughter, R. A. Recovering the Future. Grad. School of Environ. Science, Monash University, Melbourne: iv + 189 pp(1988) ISBN 0-86746-667-7. Recovering the future)[6]
  • Slaughter, R. A. (ed) Studying the Future, Bicentennial Futures Education Project. Commission For the Future, Melbourne: xiv + 82 pp (1989) ISBN 0-642-14281-5 (Studying the future)[7]
  • Beare, H. & Slaughter, R. A. Education for the 21st Century, Routledge, London: xii + 180 (1993). ISBN 0-415-11523-X paperback; 0-415-06832-0 hardback. (Education for 21st century)[8]
  • Slaughter, R. A. The Foresight Principle: Cultural Recovery in the 21st Century, Adamantine Press, London: xviii + 224 pp (1995) ISBN 0-275-95292-4 cloth; 0-275-95293-2 paperback. (The foresight principle)[9]
  • Slaughter, R. A. Futures Tools and Techniques. Futures Study Centre, Melbourne: 194 pp (1995, 1998 revised 2000, 2002) ISBN 0-7316-2650-8 (Future tools and techniques)[10]
  • SLAUGHTER, R. A. Futures Concepts and Powerful Ideas, Futures Study Centre, Melbourne: viii + 225 pp (1996 revised 2000, 2002) ISBN: 0-7325-0268-3 (Future concept and powerfull ideas)[11]
  • SLAUGHTER, R.A. New Thinking for a New Millennium, Routledge, London: xiv + 242pp (1996) ISBN: 0-415-12943-5 (New thinking for a millenium)[12]
  • SLAUGHTER, R.A. The Knowledge Base of Futures Studies, Vol. 1: Foundations; Vol 2: Organisations, Practices, Products; Vol. 3: Directions and Outlooks: Futures Study Centre, Melbourne (1996) ISBN: 0-9586654-0-0 set; 0-9586654-1-9 vol 1; 0-9586654-2-7 vol 2; 0-9586654-3-5 vol 3 (Knowlledge base of future studies)[13]
  • SLAUGHTER, R. A. & HICKS, D. (eds) World Yearbook of Education 1998: Futures Education, Kogan Page, London, UK (1998). ISBN: 0-7494-2236-X (Future Education)[14]
  • SLAUGHTER, R. A. Futures for the Third Millennium: Enabling the Forward View, Prospect, Sydney: x + 366 pp (1999) ISBN: 1-86316-148-1 paperback (Futures for third millenium)[15]
  • SLAUGHTER, R. A. Gone Today, Here Tomorrow: Millennium Previews, Prospect, Sydney, (2000) ISBN: 1-86316-122-8 (Gone today here tomorrow)[16]
  • SLAUGHTER, R. A. Futures Beyond Dystopia: Creating Social Foresight, Routledge, London: xxviii + 306 pp (2004) ISBN: 0-415-30269-2 hardback; 0-415-30270-6 paperback (Futures beyound dystopia)[17]
  • Monograph Series 1-10, published individually by the Australian Foresight Institute 2003- 2006. Re-issued as set in library binding, Australian Graduate School of Entrepreneurship, Swinburne University, Melbourne, (2008). 640 pp, ISBN: 85590819-XRichard Slaughter, Foresight International, 2012 (Monograph series)[18]

(SLAUGHTER, R. A. & BUSSEY, M. Futures Thinking for Social Foresight, Tamkang University Press, Taipei, Taiwan, (2006). xiv + 195pp ISBN: 986738541-1 (Future thinking for social foresight)[19]

  • SLAUGHTER, R. A. The Biggest Wake-Up Call in History, Foresight International, Brisbane, (2010). xii + 233 pp, ISBN 978-0-9757354-3-5. (The biggest wake up call in history)[20]
  • SLAUGHTER, R. A. To See With Fresh Eyes. Integral Futures and the Global Emergency, Foresight International, Brisbane, (2012). xxv + 238 pp, ISBN 978-0-975735473.(Integral futures and global emergency)[21]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Association of Professional Futurists - Most Significant Futures Works". Profuturists.org. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  2. ^ "The Foresight Network". Shapingtomorrowmain.ning.com. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  3. ^ "Australian Foresight Institute | Swinburne Research Bank". Researchbank.swinburne.edu.au. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  4. ^ "Ten Foresight Monographs". richardslaughter.com.au. August 25, 2013. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  5. ^ "Birds in Bermuda - first book Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  6. ^ "Recovering the future - the book by Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  7. ^ "Studying the future - the book by Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  8. ^ "Education for 21st century - first book Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  9. ^ "The foresight principle - first book Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  10. ^ "Future tools and Techniques - first book Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  11. ^ "Future concept and powerfull ideas - book of Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  12. ^ "New thinking for a millenium - book of Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  13. ^ "Knowlledge base of future studies - book of Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  14. ^ "Future Education - book of Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  15. ^ "Futures for third millenium - book of Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  16. ^ "Gone today,here tomorrow - book of Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  17. ^ "Futures of dystopia - book of Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  18. ^ "Monograph series - book of Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  19. ^ "Future thinking for social foresight - book of Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  20. ^ "The biggest wake up call in history - book of Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  21. ^ "Integral futures and global emergency - book of Richard Slaughter". Richard Slaughter. Retrieved December 20, 2013.

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