Futures Literacy Labs
Overview
Futures Literacy Labs (FLL) are structured collective intelligence processes developed by Riel Miller and UNESCO's Futures Literacy program since 2012. Unlike traditional foresight methods that aim to predict or prepare for the future, FLLs focus on revealing and expanding how people imagine futures - treating "using the future" as a learnable skill, like reading literacy.
The core insight: everyone uses futures constantly (anticipating, planning, worrying), but most do so unconsciously with inherited assumptions. FLLs create rigorous "laboratory" conditions where participants systematically test their futures-thinking, discover hidden assumptions, and learn to generate novel possibilities that were literally unthinkable before. It's metacognitive training for imagination.
Over 110 FLLs have been conducted in 44 countries, addressing challenges from urban planning to climate adaptation to education reform. The methodology doesn't produce strategic plans or forecasts - it produces transformed capacity to imagine and act, enabling communities to escape dominant narratives and discover new options.
When to Use
- Communities stuck in single future narrative (often dystopian or utopian)
- Need to surface and challenge unconscious assumptions about what's possible
- Stakeholders with radically different worldviews must collaborate
- Preparing for profound uncertainty where extrapolation fails
- Educational contexts teaching futures thinking skills
- Breaking free from "colonized" futures imposed by powerful actors
- Situations where premature consensus masks unexplored possibilities
- When standard scenario planning feels stale or produces variations on same themes
The Process
Step 1: Design the Laboratory Setup
Define the learning question and assemble diverse participant group (15-50 people). Design must be rigorous like scientific experiment - testing specific hypotheses about futures-thinking.
Example: Urban planning FLL in coastal city: "How do we imagine the future of this waterfront district?" Participants include developers, residents, environmentalists, city officials.
Step 2: Reveal Current Assumptions (Baseline)
Facilitate initial futures exercise asking participants to imagine the focal issue 20-30 years ahead. Capture detailed narratives. This establishes baseline - what futures are "thinkable" right now?
Key insight: Most groups produce remarkably similar futures reflecting dominant narratives (technological progress, climate catastrophe, economic growth, etc.).
Step 3: Make Assumptions Explicit
Guide systematic unpacking of baseline futures: What are we assuming about causation? Power? Human nature? Technology? Which actors appear? Which are invisible? What's inevitable vs. contingent?
Output: Participants often surprised to discover shared blind spots - entire dimensions of possibility they collectively ignored.
Step 4: Introduce Reframing Challenge
Present alternative futures logic, framework, or constraint that disrupts baseline assumptions. This is the "experimental intervention."
Examples:
- "Imagine a future where economic growth is physically impossible. Now what?"
- "A future where AI consciousness is legally recognized."
- "A future designed by the river, not by humans."
Step 5: Generate Expanded Futures
Participants develop futures under the reframed conditions. This is difficult - brains resist imagining outside habitual patterns. Facilitator coaches through discomfort.
Outcome: New narratives emerge that were literally inconceivable in Step 2. Not predictions, but expanded imagination space.
Step 6: Compare and Reflect
Juxtapose baseline vs. reframed futures. Analyze: What assumptions shifted? What new actors/forces appeared? What possibilities emerged? What does this reveal about how we were unconsciously limiting options?
Learning consolidation: Participants gain metacognitive awareness - they've experienced their own futures literacy expanding.
Step 7: Apply Insights to Present Action
Ask: Given this expanded imagination capacity, what actions become possible now that weren't before? Not implementing a specific future, but acting with greater creativity and agency.
Example: Waterfront planning group discovers they'd unconsciously assumed private development was inevitable. Reframed futures revealed community ownership models they'd dismissed as "unrealistic." New action: Seriously investigate land trust options.
Example Application
Situation (European city, 2015): Syrian refugee crisis. City officials and citizens locked in polarized debate - accept refugees (utopian multiculturalism) vs. resist (dystopian cultural threat).
Application: Futures Literacy Lab on "Future of Urban Diversity"
Execution:
- Baseline futures (Step 2): Participants produced two predictable narratives - successful integration utopia or social breakdown dystopia
- Revealed assumptions (Step 3): Both futures assumed cultural identity as fixed, integration as one-way assimilation or conflict, nation-state as primary organizing unit
- Reframing challenge (Step 4): "Imagine a future where urban identity transcends national identity, where cities operate as autonomous cultural laboratories"
- Expanded futures (Step 5): Participants imagined city-based citizenship, cross-cultural innovation hubs, fluid identity networks, cultural exchange as economic engine
- Reflection (Step 6): Realized the utopia/dystopia binary was false constraint. Discovered third options beyond assimilation-or-conflict framing
- New actions (Step 7): City initiated neighborhood-scale cultural exchange programs, rejected national government's refugee distribution mandate in favor of city-designed approach
Outcome: Broke political stalemate, enabled creative policy experimentation, participants reported lasting shift in how they approach contested issues.
Example Application 2
Situation (UNESCO Education program): How should education evolve to prepare students for 2050?
Application: Global FLL series with educators across 20 countries.
Execution:
- Baseline: Teachers imagined "better versions" of current education - more technology, personalized learning, improved curriculum
- Revealed assumptions: All baseline futures assumed job preparation as education's purpose, industrial school structure (age-based grades, subjects, credentials), adult-as-teacher
- Reframing: "Imagine education in a future where AI does most cognitive labor, or where climate adaptation requires relocalization, or where longevity extends learning across 100-year lifespans"
- Expanded futures: Emerged concepts: lifelong learning cooperatives, AI-as-collaborator not replacement, education-as-community-resilience, peer-to-peer intergenerational knowledge networks
- New actions: Several schools piloted age-mixing experiments, community-rooted curriculum, learning-to-learn focus over content transmission
Outcome: UNESCO incorporated futures literacy into education policy frameworks, recognizing that educators' capacity to imagine new possibilities is prerequisite for systemic change.
Anti-Patterns
- ❌ Using FLL to generate consensus strategic plan (it's learning tool, not planning exercise)
- ❌ Superficial reframing that doesn't truly challenge baseline assumptions
- ❌ Skipping the rigorous reflection phase - participants leave with new futures but no metacognitive insight
- ❌ Facilitator pushing preferred future rather than enabling genuine discovery
- ❌ Treating expanded futures as predictions to be evaluated for likelihood (misses the point)
- ❌ Homogeneous participant group producing narrow imagination range
- ❌ One-off session without follow-up to consolidate learning and enable action
- ❌ Rushing the discomfort of reframing - genuine imagination expansion is cognitively demanding
- ❌ Using FLL to manipulate stakeholders toward predetermined conclusion
- ❌ Failing to document process rigorously (FLL should produce generalizable knowledge about futures-thinking)
- ❌ Treating futures literacy as abstract skill divorced from specific action contexts
Related
- anticipatory-assumptions (examining how we use the future)
- backcasting-from-desired-futures (alternative approach starting from vision)
- three-horizons (complementary framework for managing present-to-future transition)
- participatory-futures (engaging stakeholders in foresight)
- scenario-planning (may complement FLL for strategic implementation)
- critical-futures (interrogating power dynamics in dominant narratives)
- indigenous-futures (non-Western ways of relating to time and possibility)
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