Theorizing Imagined Futures from the South: Coloniality, Dependency and Radical Alternatives
Conference
- Start: May 27, 2025
- End: May 28, 2025
- Location: Cologne
- Host: MPIfG

The
objective of the conference is to theorize about the role of imagined futures
in social dynamics from the perspective of the Global South. There is a vibrant
theoretical literature on imagined futures and MPI scholars have contributed to
our understanding of the significance of uncertainty and credible expectations
in capitalist dynamics. Although this work is crucial, it has tended to focus
on the Global North and therefore it does not adequately capture capitalism as
it is experienced by the majority of the world. The conference aims to address
this gap by initiating dialogue between scholars with a theoretical interest in
the role of imagined futures and empirical research on Global South countries.
The conference is not intended to apply the extant imagined futures theory to
“new cases”, but rather to rethink the temporality and future-orientation of
capitalism from the vantage point of the South. This perspective would revise
the tropes of innovation, growth, and progress associated with capitalism and
foreground experiences of imperialism, dependency and stagnation. However, the
Global South is not simply characterized by exploitation; it is also a source
of utopias and socio-economic alternatives to capitalism. These utopias and
proposals for a New International Economic Order (NIEO) are often perceived as
failures. Yet new perspectives on these “past futures” might provide crucial
insights as we attempt to address the current multidimensional crises of
capitalism.