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Crude Conversations

Museums in a Climate of Change: Chatter Marks EP 73 Futures thinking, perseverance and climate change with Kristin Alford of the Museum of Discovery at the University of South Australia

Crude Conversations

crudemag

Society & Culture

5884 Ratings

🗓️ 25 October 2023

⏱️ 82 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Kristin Alford is a futurist and the director of the Museum of Discovery, or MOD., in South Australia. She says that MOD.’s main objective is to showcase innovative research that imagines multiple futures. This idea of imagining multiple futures involves anticipating where society and nature might be headed based on past and current trends. She says that it’s about understanding and recognizing opportunities, risks and downsides, and then thinking about the unintended consequences or possible actions that can be taken. In showcasing these futures, MOD. hopes to inspire young people to learn more about where technology, ethics and social issues might be headed so that they can make better decisions for their own futures. When putting together an exhibition, one of MOD.’s main tenants is for people to leave with a feeling of hope, not one of anxiety or depression. Because these are big issues they’re tackling — populating other planets, climate change, the future. Next year, they’re opening an exhibition called Broken, about the general feeling of anxiety and ambivalence about the future. In order to instill hope in this exhibition, people are asked a series of questions based on psychologist Charles Snyder’s Elements of Hope: “Do you have a positive vision of the future that brings you forward?” “Do you feel positive about that vision?” “Do you feel like you have agency to make a difference?” And, “Are there multiple pathways for you to reach your goal?” In this Chatter Marks series, Cody and co-host Dr. Sandro Debono talk to museum directors and knowledge holders about what museums around the world are doing to adapt and react to climate change. Dr. Debono is a museum thinker from the Mediterranean island of Malta. He works with museums to help them strategize around possible futures.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

The future will be as complex and messy as the present, which probably isn't helpful.

0:18.4

But I keep thinking to 2050 and thinking about the likely climate effects, which will

0:25.9

have significant impact.

0:27.5

There's no way of going around that.

0:29.6

I think about those worlds, and I think about the people in those worlds, and I think

0:33.6

they'll be doing what we're doing now.

0:36.8

They'll be arguing about best ways forward.

0:42.1

They'll be constantly frustrated by meal planning and schedules and all of those human

0:49.9

things that we do will exist.

0:53.4

That was Kristin Olford.

0:55.3

She's a futurist and the director of the Museum of Discovery or Maud in South Australia.

1:01.7

She says that Maud's main objective is to showcase innovative research that imagines multiple

1:07.2

futures.

1:08.9

This idea of imagining multiple futures involves anticipating where society and nature might

1:15.0

be headed based on past and current trends.

1:18.9

She says that it's about understanding and recognizing opportunities, risks and downsides,

1:25.3

and then thinking about the unintended consequences or possible actions that can be taken.

1:32.0

In showcasing these futures, Maud hopes to inspire young people to learn more about where

1:37.2

technology, ethics and social issues might be headed so that they can make better decisions

1:43.8

for their own futures.

1:46.6

When putting together an exhibition, one of Maud's main tenets is for people to leave

1:51.6

with a feeling of hope, not one of anxiety or depression because these are big issues

...

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