Difference between revisions of "Backcasting"
From Coastal Wiki
(→Example) |
(→Source) |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
== Source == | == Source == | ||
[http://www.dse.vic.gov.au/effective-engagement/toolkit/tool-backcasting To deepen your knowledge on backcasting: Quist J,, Vergragt P. Past and future of backcasting: The shift to stakeholder participation and a proposal for a methodological frameworkFutures 38 (2006) 1027–1045.] | [http://www.dse.vic.gov.au/effective-engagement/toolkit/tool-backcasting To deepen your knowledge on backcasting: Quist J,, Vergragt P. Past and future of backcasting: The shift to stakeholder participation and a proposal for a methodological frameworkFutures 38 (2006) 1027–1045.] | ||
− | <references/> | + | <p style="Margin-left: -10px> <references/></p> |
Revision as of 16:48, 11 March 2013
Contents
Objectives
Backcasting allows a group of people to weigh up the implications of different future options or policy goals.
Method
- Define future goals and objectives, projecting 25-50 years into the future.
- Specify the scenario by analysing the technological and physical characteristics of a path that would lead towards the specified goals.
- Evaluate the scenario in terms of physical, technological and socio-economic feasibility and policy implications.
- Brainstorm ways this desired end-point can be achieved, working backwards to the present.
Example
Guadalentı´n (Spain) and the Vald’Agri (Italy) workshops about the developing of local scenarios [1].
Source