Challenges, Vol. 16, Pages 26: From Utopia to Dystopia: Interviews in Iceland About the Future Amid Climate Change
Challenges doi: 10.3390/challe16020026
Authors:
Michelle Ritchie
Sarah Heaton
Alexander Scheid
Hannah Mott
Gudrun Mobus Bernhards
Sloane Sengson
Kathryn Foral
Jon Calabria
Studies at the intersection of climate change and futures research are needed. In response, we interviewed Icelanders (n = 63) to understand individuals’ visions of the future. Linguistic analysis revealed that participants expressed themselves informally with moderate confidence, high authenticity, and a negative tone. Deductive thematic analysis revealed three overarching visions of the future: (1) a utopian future characterized by environmental and social harmony where people return to nature; (2) a stable future reminiscent of today with improved infrastructure, connectivity, and continued sustainability and adaptation practices that maintain a rural lifestyle; and (3) a dystopian future marked by climate disruptions, overpopulation, and new environmental hazards requiring more emergency management resources alongside cultural barriers to adaptation that lead to the decay of infrastructure. The findings underscore the need to understand community-specific values and concerns for developing culturally sensitive and sustainable climate change adaptation strategies.
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Michelle Ritchie www.mdpi.com