Various activities April – June 2026
2026-06-30
Anders Högberg, Gustav Wollentz and Cornelius Holtorf, among others, took place in an informal meeting with the national organizers of “Collection Forum 2026. Visions and Innovations”, a conference attracting ca 150-200 participants and taking place in November 2026 in collaboration with Kalmar County Museum in Kalmar (7 April 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf briefly presented some theoretical perspectives on time travel in different formats for the emerging internal Centrum for living and embodied history at Linnaeus University. Even Gustav Wollentz participated in the meeting (8 April 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf was interviewed by a group of students at Sciences Po Paris, reading the course Policy Making Initiative for Sustainability, about various issue concerning future generations and long-term memory in the context of nuclear waste (9 April 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf took place in the regular meeting of the International Scientific Committee on AeroSpace Heritage of the International Council of Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) which discussed, among others, including a presentation on Space Law at the UN Committee on the Peaceful uses of Outer Space’s 65th Legal Sub Committee’s meeting in Vienna (10 April 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf had an informal discussion with Sarah Thomas and Zoe Tcholak-Antitch on continuing collaboration regarding their Future Generations Communications Playbook (13 April 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf presented an invited online lecture entitled “Nuclear Waste as Heritage of the Future: What Archaeology Teaches Us About 100,000-Year Communication” for ca 20 participants in the NewComers4Nuclear Global lecture series (14 April 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf had an informal meeting, discussing future collaboration, with Mathias Lafolie, Head of Culture at the municipality of Kalmar (16 April 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf co-presented a talk on “Thinking with Soil in Heritage Matters” for an audience of 20 students and researchers at the Green Zone Higher Seminar in Environmental Humanities at the University of Stockholm, Sweden (23 April 2026).
Anders Högberg, Cornelius Holtorf, and Gustav Wollentz, among others, took part in an informal virtual meeting with Chiara Bortolotto, UNESCO Chairholder in Intangible Cultural Heritage and Sustainable Development in Paris, discussing future research needs concerning the contribution of intangible cultural heritage to social sustainability (30 April 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf was among ca 90 participants from the global region of Europe and North America in a meeting by the Sustainable Development Goals Working Group (SDGWG) of ICOMOS on “Integrating Culture and Cultural Heritage into Sustainable Development” (19 May 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf attended a Briefing on Culture, Heritage and Adaptation related to the forthcoming UNFCCC intersessional meeting known as SB64 and organized by the Heritage Adapts to Climate Alliance (HACA) (20 May 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf presented a talk on “Heritage Futures – how cultural heritage can make us hopeful” for the K3 Heritage Research Seminar at the University of Malmö, Sweden (25 May 2026).
Anders Högberg, Cornelius Holtorf, Gustav Wollentz and Marcy Rockman participated in a working meeting with Philip Buckland, Umeå University, and Marcus Fjellström, University of Stockholm, on synergies regarding the project on sustainable heritage funded by the Swedish National Heritage Board (27 May 2026).
Several members of the Chair digitally attended a lecture by Kim Stanley Robinson on “Designing a Just Climate Future”, held in the UNESCO Thought Leaders series in Paris (3 June 2026). Robinson is the author of “The Ministry of the Future”, among other novels. UNESCO stated: “His body of work explores the long-term future of humanity through a blend of scientific rigor, ecological awareness, and socio-political imagination. His novels examine how collective choices shape possible futures, often presenting multiple pathways rather than fixed outcomes. This approach aligns closely with the goals of the UNESCO MOST Programme and its emphasis on anticipatory, evidence-based policy for social transformations, using Futures Literacy and Foresight to enhance our capability to use the future to shape the present. Robinson’s speculative scenarios help readers and policymakers alike imagine alternative systems, anticipate challenges, and cultivate the capacity to navigate uncertainty—core principles in contemporary futures and foresight methodologies.”
Cornelius Holtorf participated actively updating progress in regarding our working group on heritage processes and futures literacy in the second Plenary Meeting of the Expert Group on Archiving and Awareness Preservation (EGAAP-2) of the Nuclear Energy Agency held at the OECD in Paris (11-12 June 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf attended a virtual UNESCO Futures Dialogue on “Time and Possibilities: Governing and researching time in new ways for transformative futures”. Among the speakers for an audience of cirka 170 , including many UNESCO Chairs, were Keri Facer and Michelle Bastian (24 June 2026).
Cornelius Holtorf (and Marcy Rockman??) made suggestions for an update of the 2008 ICOMOS Charter on the Interpretation and Presentation of Cultural Heritage Sites, responding to a call members of the ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Interpretation and Presentation (ICIP) (27 June 2026)




















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