A weekend of foresight, connection, and transformation!
AI-powered foresight tools, localized and resilient futures, and turning foresight into actionable change within organizations and communities. Participate in hands-on workshops, explore innovative frameworks, and connect with fellow futurists to co-create the futures you want to see.
Submit your presentation by March 13th and lead us into the future!
Abstracts

Digital Foresight: Data, Tools, and AI
Digital Foresight: Data, Tools, and AI: AI is already transforming Foresight, with many practitioners using it to augment their current processes. I will show three interconnected developments: a general-purpose data model for Houston’s Framework Foresight process, a digital tool that implements this data model for Framework Foresight projects, and an AI overlay that assists in each step.
Tristan Markwell
Tristan Markwell is a current student in the UH Foresight Masters program. He has nearly 2 decades of experience in Healthcare data, AI, and strategy.

Localizing the Future
Tim Morgan
Tim Morgan is a Dallas–Fort Worth based educator and independent consultant specializing in strategic foresight and innovation. A member of the Association of Professional Futurists and a 2019 APF Emerging Fellow, he received a 2020 APF Most Significant Futures Work award for his research on automation and modes of ownership. A former systems engineer and IT analyst, he authors The Everyday Futurist, a blog exploring the evolving future of society and technology.

Making Foresight Stick: The Organizational Readiness Factor
Ashley Chiarelli
Ashley Chiarelli is a Senior Strategist, Foresight Practitioner, and Change Agent with 12+ years of experience making transformation real in complex organizations. She has facilitated transformation at scale, from a 4,700-person organizational move to creating change management frameworks deployed across 25 global offices, and has navigated organizational resistance across oil & gas, science & tech, government, and academic sectors. Ashley specializes in the gap between transformation and implementation—understanding the organizational conditions, resource realities, and cultural factors that determine whether strategic insights become lasting change.

The Brazil Signals Spotlight: Coming Together for a Brazilian Lunch in the Future
The Brazil Signals Spotlight: Coming Together for a Brazilian Lunch in the Future: The UNDP Strategy and Futures Team partnered with the UNDP Brazil Country Office and Brazilian Government to explore 16 themes (youth, education, healthcare, infrastructure, governance, etc.) for Brazil’s future 10 years from now. Using UH’s Framework Foresight, the team supported the development of the Brazil Signals Spotlight, which represents an ongoing process to introduce foresight capability and capacity within the Brazilian government and throughout the country. The session will review the participatory process used to develop it and the resulting document and Toolkit, including a game, Futures’ Served, and an exercise, Acting in the Jungle of Change, designed to ignite conversations.
Ingrid Furtado is a storyteller and futurist who integrates journalism with foresight expertise to help organizations and communities navigate change. A double award-winning futurist, she focuses on liberatory practices, personal futures, and sustainable pathways. Ingrid has led foresight projects as a consultant, project lead, and facilitator for organizations of all sizes. As a Futures Fellow at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), she applies her expertise to advance sustainable development. She holds an MS in Foresight from the University of Houston and a BA in Journalism from Pontifical Catholic University (PUC-Minas), Brazil.

Stephen Dupont is a UNDP Future Fellow for 2025-2026. Based in Minneapolis-St. Paul, he earned his master’s degree in foresight from the University of Houston (2024). He also serves as editor of Compass, an online magazine published by the Association of Professional Futurists (APF.org) and serves on the boards of the APF and Teach the Future.

Transformation with STILE
Transformation with STILE: The journey to transformation can be viewed in the context of the Three Horizons framework. But how do you know if the transformative change is happening? The STILE tool provides a structured set of questions to guide the monitoring of change as it unfolds (or doesn’t) across the Three Horizons in 5 categories (S=Social Acceptance, T=Technological Capability, I=Infrastructure, L=Legal, and E=Entrepreneurial will and resources). We believe this tool provides a efficient and reliable way to track the progress of transformation.
Dr. Andy Hines is Associate Professor and Program Coordinator for the University of Houston’s Graduate Program in Foresight and is also speaking, workshopping, and consulting through his firm Hinesight.

Mina McBride’s primary goal is to make foresight actionable. She uses her knowledge of behavior change and systems development to help organizations and individuals experience peak performance in business, health, and life by focusing on their strengths while utilizing proven psychological and futures studies methods to remove the barriers associated with meeting the demands of a rapidly changing world where continuous adaptation is a requirement. Her futures work has been published in foresight journals such as On the Horizon, World Futures Review, and Journal of Futures Studies. She also works professionally in the field at a Fortune 50 company where she leads the corporate foresight team in its use of quantitative and qualitative foresight methods to inform strategic planning processes. Mina holds a degree in Psychology and has a master’s in Foresight from the University of Houston.

Transforming Participatory Foresight into Participatory Strategy
Transforming Participatory Foresight into Participatory Strategy: KnowledgeWorks’ seventh anchor forecast, Charting a New Course for Education, explored how education systems might evolve over the next decade by adapting the UH Foresight Framework into a participatory research process. Now, using this forecast as a foundation, along with outputs from working sessions with educators, KnowledgeWorks has a forthcoming strategy guide in May 2026.
Maria Crabtree
In her role as director of strategic foresight projects,Maria Crabtree (formerly Romero) makes substantive contributions to KnowledgeWorks’ national thought leadership around the future of learning and conducts key strategic foresight activities. She manages projects, directs and carries out strategic foresight research and collaborates with colleagues to author publications and other assets exploring the future of learning and its implications for education leaders. Maria holds a BS in Sociology from the Universidad Central de Venezuela, advanced studies in Communications from Universidad Católica Andrés Bello and an MS in Foresight from the University of Houston. She is an International Baccalaureate alum and a member of the Association of Professional Futurists and the Project Management Institute.

Jeremiah-Anthony Righteous-Rogers
In the role of senior manager of strategic foresight, Jeremiah-Anthony supports the organization’s strategic foresight, analysis and writing on the future of learning. Moreover, Jeremiah-Anthony provides project management projects, participates in strategic foresight research and supports external engagements. Jeremiah-Anthony holds a BA in Mass Communication and a BA in African and African-American Studies from Louisiana State University and an MPAP from the American University. Jeremiah-Anthony is a member of the Association of Professional Futurists and the Project Management Institute.

Seeding Transformation: Encounters with Prosocial Futures
Seeding Transformation: Encounters with Prosocial Futures: Prosocial futures is a practice-based approach designed to surface cooperative behaviors and orient practitioners and participants toward futures that privilege equity and human flourishing. Grounded in cooperation research that demonstrates the human tendency toward mutual aid under stress, the framework operates through three elements: authenticity (aligning personal values with professional practice), hope (evidence-based trust in human cooperative capacity), and agency (identifying one’s unique contribution to better futures). Applied to immersive futures encounters, prosocial futures functions as a studio for participants to practice a prosocial posture and to activate their innate agency to seed change, centering the ongoing practice of noticing who is harmed, who is missing, and where the participant’s skills and strengths might fill the gap. Through the intentional and guided identification of a self-shaped hole in any given future, participants rehearse an orientation toward justice that transfers back to the present, where needs may be less legible but where the urgency to act is pivotal.
Nicci Obert
Nicci Obert serves as the Research Director for the University of Houston Foresight program. Her research focuses on activating prosocial futures by developing methods for practitioners and participants to practice an orientation toward cooperation and the cocreation of better futures. She brings a background in nonprofit work, biology, and writing to the work of imagining and manifesting futures worth wanting.

Small Moves, Big Shifts: Using the Theory of Minimalist Transformation to Empower Futurists as Change Agents
Small Moves, Big Shifts: Using the Theory of Minimalist Transformation to Empower Futurists as Change Agents: While foresight practitioners use their toolkits to help audiences find their preferred futures, those same tools can help drive the transformation to make them more likely. This session offers one approach to connect futures research and active change management by integrating the UH Foresight toolkit with the change theories of Kurt Lewin and the minimalist intervention strategies of James Wilke. Participants will explore a practical theory of transformation that treats futures research as a primary input for identifying high-leverage change points. By positioning the futurist as a change agent, this presentation provides a lens for spotting opportunities and offers a layered framework for driving change through focused, intentional effort.
Philip Jones is an AI Business Strategist at Salesforce, where he helps define approaches to implement AI technology grounded in human well-being and ethics. He is also a student of the UH Strategic Foresight Master’s Program and has been combining his work in AI, organizational change, and foresight to improve his approaches to each. He has over 15 years of experience in organizational and individual change management, with a focus on how people adapt to new technology and thinking. His focus in foresight has been applying futures and change to make people and teams more adaptable, and the role AI has in changing ways of thinking and relating to the world.

Catalyzing Transformation Confronting Barriers Misconceptions and Resistance
Catalyzing Transformation Confronting Barriers Misconceptions and Resistance: Futurists are naturally fascinated by change, including (or especially) deep, system-level transformations. And it is often clear to us that because the world is changing fast, the thing that will most serve our clients is to change along with it—sometimes at a transformative scale. But for clients, the prospect of transformation can be frightening. They can resist discussing futures that are probable but aren’t part of their “official future;” have a hard time seeing that a system has lost its fitness-for-purpose; or see transformation as impossible, unacceptably risky, or even unthinkable. This session explores what makes it hard for clients, organizations and communities to recognize when transformation is necessary, and then effect that transformation. The goal is to leave the session with practical approaches for futurists looking to help organizations engage with transformation when their systems are no longer fit for purpose — and to enrich that ecosystem of approaches by drawing on the collective knowledge of the group.
Karessa Torgerson is a transdisciplinary futurist focused on the futures of technology, biosciences, human connection and authenticity, and integrity. She has worked with organizations large a small, including UNICEF, Conceptia, and US Centers for Disease Control, to build foresight capabilities, and create more sustainable, joyful futures. She holds a BS in Environmental Sciences with a minor in Chemistry, and an MsC in Foresight from the University of Houston.

Dr. Lavonne Leong is Principal of Embr Futures, a firm specializing in adaptive and transformational futures, as well as foresight capacity building. She has worked with organizations and communities worldwide, including the United Nations Development Programme and the East-West Center. Dr. Leong serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Futures Studies and co-founded its Community of Practice. She holds an MSc in Strategic Foresight from the University of Houston and a DPhil focusing on narrative structures from the University of Oxford.

Transformation in the Era of Uncertainty Pathways to Understanding
As Danielle Van De Velde quipped, “When everything is uncertain, everything is possible”. In an era of increasing uncertainty, when transformation has been identified as necessary, questions linger: “Transform to what?”, “How can I be confident that my efforts won’t just be throw-away?”, “How do I lead my organization through change when the path is so unclear, even to me as the leader. In this session Gordon combines his Change leadership, Uncertainty mastery, and Futures learnings to bring recommendations for how to approach change in an era of rampant uncertainty to maximize results, including stakeholder and team alignment, ownership, clarity of purpose, and enduring outcomes.
Gordon Withrow leads digital, agile, and organization transformation as Principal, Gordon Withrow & Company. With a deep background in bridging business and technology, Gordon has led the delivery of large scale transformations over several decades, both as a senior technology leader in Fortune 100 (Nationwide Financial Services) and in Global Consultancy (IBM). Gordon also serves as a board member (AI Freedom Alliance, One Vertical Tier, Kricker Innovation Hub at Shawnee State University), guest speaker & web caster (Project Bites, Project Management Institute), Managing Director of Cygnus Publishing, and has been developing and managing futures for Embodied AI for nearly 5 years.

Where Does Foresight Actually Live? Designing the Enterprise Operating Model for Transformation & Change
Organizations invest in foresight to anticipate disruption, yet many insights never move beyond the slide deck. The problem is not imagination. It is infrastructure. In both commercial enterprises and complex public institutions, strategy teams define direction but rarely have the mandate to test alternative futures in motion. The real leverage often sits elsewhere, inside innovation offices, portfolio governance bodies, and venture teams that control experimentation and capital flow. This session introduces an enterprise operating model for transformation. It shows how different types of futures work belong in different parts of the organization. Participants will leave with a practical framework for moving foresight out of planning cycles and into the operating system of the enterprise.
Kiran L. Carpenter is a Strategic Foresight and Innovation Design Strategist and Principal Consultant at Slalom, where she is part of the Research and Intelligence team integrating futures thinking into firm methodology and client engagements. She advises complex enterprises and mission-driven institutions on aligning strategy and innovation, designing operating models that convert foresight into funded experiments, portfolio decisions, and measurable value. Her work focuses on embedding futures across governance, capital allocation, and cultural systems to build durable adaptive capacity. Kiran holds a master’s degree in Strategic Foresight from the University of Houston and applies systems thinking and behavioral science to enterprise transformation.