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Regular version of the site

Foresight: Moving from the Future to the Present

Russia is beginning to develop a system of strategic planning. One of its elements is foresight of science and technology development. What place does foresight occupy in this system, and how can its results be implemented? In an interview for the Science and Technology in Russia project, First Vice Rector of HSE and Director of its Institute for Statistical Studies and Economics of Knowledge (ISSEK) Leonid Gokhberg explained why Russia needs foresight. According to colleagues at the OECD, ISSEK is one of the biggest foresight centres in the world. In September 2014, it will be launching a Master’s Programme 'Governance of Science, Technology, and Innovation', which for the most part will be focused on foresight studies. 

— How is foresight different from forecasting?

— Forecasting has been around for hundreds of years, but foresight studies emerged in the 1970s when the process of technology development accelerated sharply. At that time, people realised that the quantitative methods of forecasting weren’t working anymore.

Prognosis is moving from the present to the future, but foresight is the opposite — moving from the future to the present. The difference is ideological. Forecasting works by guessing the future based on the present situation and taking into account possible, but generally rather unpredictable, drivers of development.

The job of foresight is not to predict the future, but to create, on the basis of a consensus among decision makers and leading experts, an integrated vision of the future and to attempt to devise a possible plan of action to respond to key challenges and to reach identified aims. 

A key element of foresight research is the process of attracting expert knowledge and agreeing the positions of the parties. We cannot talk about building a future or forming a strategy unless we take the interest of stakeholders into account. The art of this kind of research is in choosing the right experts and, ideally, balancing the interests of all the players. But, alas, there is a serious shortage of experts in certain areas of science and technology. This was the problem we encountered when developing Russian S&T Foresight 2030. The culture of long-term planning is lacking in politics, scientific research, technology, as well as in the corporate sector. Business lives only in the present; science looks, at most, three years ahead when allocating money. Developing new foresight instruments and switching to long-term scientific research programmes, including those in the framework of state programmes, will bring about a positive change, by setting the strategic vector for related technology sectors.

— Why is HSE providing expertise and analytical support for developing S&T Foresight for Russia?

— We have a strong team here at HSE. We are involved in a broad spectrum of research and expert analysis for the government, intensively developing at HSE. We are members of all major foresight research networks and were among the founders of International Foresight Academy. We have an International Advisory Board on foresight. One of its first institutional decisions was to create Foresight Centre at HSE, which gave rise to Foresight-Russia journal, now indexed in the Scopus database. We are also considering promoting the journal in the Web of Science, since we began to publish its English language version this year.

As one of the classics of foresight, Professor Ian D. Miles, is Head of HSE Laboratory for Economics of Innovation, and Ozcan Saritas — Editor in Chief of English journal Foresight and one of the brightest young academics in the field — has transferred to us from Manchester University, we are able to provide international expertise, as well. We publish a series of monographs selected by an international editorial board with Springer; remarkably, since recently, every chapter gets indexed as an article by the Web of Science. In the autumn, we will be running our annual conference 'Foresight and STI policy'. 

— And you train specialists in foresight as well?

— Naturally. There are about 150 of them now — we have a very strong and mainly young team. Almost all of them studied and qualified in the best western universities and foresight centres. Every summer we send young ones to the top foresight summer schools. HSE already offers a course on foresight, and from September, we’ll be running an English language Master’s Programme 'Governance of Science, Technology and Innovation', which will, for the most part, be focused on foresight research at all levels, including corporate foresight and technology roadmaps. It will be taught partly by guest professors from various countries.

Read the full version (in Russian)

By Anna Gorbatova

See also:

‘An STI-Accelerated and Informed Future is Possible’

The Twelfth International Academic Conference ‘Foresight and Science, Technology and Innovation Policy’ is kicking off at HSE University on November 22. Alexander Sokolov, chair of the organising committee, talked to the HSE News Service about the evolution of the foresight agenda. Two of the conference speakers, Ibon Zugasti from Spain and Mlungisi Cele from South Africa, shared some highlights of their research.

UNESCO Chair on Future Studies Opens at HSE University

In 2022, a HSE University department joined the ranks of UNESCO Futures Literacy Chairs. This builds on the work of the ISSEK International Research and Educational Foresight Centre, and the activity of the Human Capital Multidisciplinary Research Centre. Professor Alexander Sokolov, head of the new department, Director of the International Research and Educational Foresight Centre, and Deputy Director of HSE ISSEK, spoke about the establishment, aims and objectives of the UNESCO Chair on Future Studies.

‘I Can’t Think of a Better Time for Young Researchers to Work in Foresight’

Foresight and STI Policy are among the symposium topics of the XXIII Yasin International Academic Conference. How has foresight developed in Canada? How did academic life change during the pandemic? What can early-career foresight researchers expect? The HSE News Service discussed these questions with Jonathan Calof, one of the symposium’s speakers.

HSE University Shapes Global Chain of Foresight

The COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated our swift adaptation to big challenges and strengthened cooperation ties between researchers, politicians, and entrepreneurs on national and global levels. The accumulated life and goal setting practices in the new reality will be discussed on October 15–26, 2021 by participants of the XI International Academic Conference ‘Foresight and Science, Technology and Innovation Policy’ organised by the Institute for Statistical Studies and Economics of Knowledge (ISSEK).

HSE University Expands Cooperation with the World's Leading Foresight Centres

HSE University has signed cooperation agreements with two of the world's leading research centres, NISTEP (Japan) and TIFAC (India), which provide their governments with analytical support to inform science and technology forecasting and science and technology policy.

From Science Fiction to Designing the Future: Annual Foresight Conference Commences at HSE University

This week, researchers from all over the world have gathered online for the 10th annual International Academic Conference ‘Foresight and STI Policy’ at HSE University. One of the cross-cutting themes of the anniversary forum, which will be held from November 9 to 13, is lessons learned from the pandemic and the crisis’s effects in future scenarios.

Managers’ Role in an Era of Wild Cards: Seeing Opportunities Even at Rock Bottom

Global economic trends that have emerged in 2020 have been reevaluated in the context of the pandemic and low oil prices. Businesses have reconsidered their windows of opportunity and potential threats. This is evidenced by a foresight study conducted by the Association of Managers of Russia and co-authored by Alexander Chulok, Director of the HSE Institute for Statistical Studies and Economics of Knowledge.

'I Hope That I Will Be Able to Travel to Moscow to Be with My HSE Colleagues and Friends Soon'

Jonathan Calof has been cooperating with HSE since 2009. In an interview with HSE News Service he talks about how his involvement with HSE began, what projects he has been part of, and how he has organized his online work during the recent lockdown.

HSE ISSEK Researchers Sign Cooperation Agreement with Korean Colleagues

This May, HSE and the Science and Technology Policy Institute (STEPI, Republic of Korea) signed a cooperation agreement on science and advanced technology research. This agreement was signed by Leonid Gokhberg, HSE First Vice Rector, Director of the Institute for Statistical Studies and Economics of Knowledge, and Dr. Hwang-Hee Cho, STEPI President.

Facts about Students in Science

Research plays a growing role in the educational process of the country’s leading universities. The HSE Statement of Values, for example, underscores its importance, stating: ‘Our lectures and textbooks reflect cutting-edge academic research; our academic articles, student papers, models and experiments seek to expand the horizons of contemporary academic inquiry.’ In honor of Students’ Day, we present a selection of facts about the connection between study and science in Russian universities, and specifically at HSE. (Sources: Monitoring of Education Markets and Organizations (MEMO), Monitoring Survey of Innovative Behavior of the Population (MSIBP), additional materials of the Institute for Statistical Studies and Economics of Knowledge (ISSEK), as well as results of a survey by the HSE Centre for Institutional Research (CIR).