TY - JOUR
T1 - 3D-printed futures of manufacturing, social change and technological innovation in China and Singapore
T2 - The ghost of a massless future?
AU - Heemsbergen, Luke
AU - Daly, Angela
AU - Lu, Jiajie
AU - Birtchnell, Thomas
N1 - Funding Information:
The scope of the data presented here draws from workshops with expert participants in Singapore and Shenzhen, as part of a larger project on 3D printing and intellectual property futures funded by the UK Intellectual Property Office (UK IPO). The project team developed a horizon-scanning format for each workshop that comprises three parts: MLP to establish past and present trends; structured ideal futures scenarios leveraged from Kostakis et al.; and a backcasting activity
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 SAGE Publications.
PY - 2019/7/1
Y1 - 2019/7/1
N2 - This article outlines preliminary findings from a futures forecasting exercise where participants in Shenzhen and Singapore considered the socio-technological construction of 3D printing in terms of work and social change. We offered participants ideal political-economic futures across local–global knowledge and capital–commons dimensions, and then had them backcast the contextual waypoints across markets, culture, policy, law and technology dimensions that help guide towards each future. Their discussion identified various contextually sensitive points, but also tended to dismiss the farthest reaches of each proposed ideal, often reverting to familiar contextual signifiers. Here, we offer discussion on how participants saw culture and industry shaping futures for pertinent political economic concerns in the twenty-first century.
AB - This article outlines preliminary findings from a futures forecasting exercise where participants in Shenzhen and Singapore considered the socio-technological construction of 3D printing in terms of work and social change. We offered participants ideal political-economic futures across local–global knowledge and capital–commons dimensions, and then had them backcast the contextual waypoints across markets, culture, policy, law and technology dimensions that help guide towards each future. Their discussion identified various contextually sensitive points, but also tended to dismiss the farthest reaches of each proposed ideal, often reverting to familiar contextual signifiers. Here, we offer discussion on how participants saw culture and industry shaping futures for pertinent political economic concerns in the twenty-first century.
KW - 3D printing
KW - East Asia
KW - social change
KW - Technological innovation
KW - work
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85070074366&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/0971721819841970
DO - 10.1177/0971721819841970
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85070074366
SN - 0971-7218
VL - 24
SP - 254
EP - 270
JO - Science, Technology and Society
JF - Science, Technology and Society
IS - 2
ER -