Wei-Ning Xiang, the editor in chief
The editor in chief of Socio-Ecological Practice Research (SEPR) plans to publish
a special issue in 2021 with the theme Our alternative futures in the 2020s and beyond:
scenarios of socio-ecological practice in an uncertain world. This Call for Prospectus
outlines the aims and scope of the special issue and provides guidelines for the prospectus
preparation and submission.
What does the SEPR editor look for and why?
In his widely acclaimed book The art of the long view: planning for the future in
an uncertain world, American futurist Peter Schwartz claims, on the grounds of the
latest evidence from neuroscience, that we, the human beings, are “the scenario-building
animal” who has an innate ability to compose scenarios and, through such a scenario
lens, to foresee possible futures for decision-making in an uncertain world (Schwartz
1996, p. 29).
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic presents a unique opportunity for us to take full advantage
of this scenario-building capability in our strategic thinking and planning for coping
with this hitherto unprecedented common threat and its unpredictable aftermath.1
To grasp this window of opportunity, the SEPR editor looks for contributions from
around the world that compose socio-ecological practice scenarios
to foresee alternative futures of socio-ecological practice in the 2020s and beyond:
What would the socio-ecological practice look like in the aftermath of this pandemic?
What if the pandemic persists indefinitely? and
to envision, under each alternative future, the correspondingly coping strategies
for socio-ecological practitioners and scholars: How could socio-ecological practitioners
cope? Could they “reboot” (Collier 2020)? If so, how and at what cost? How could scholars
conduct socio-ecological practice research that is useful— directly relevant, immediately
actionable, and foreseeably efficacious (Xiang 2019a, p.9)?
As an instrument for strategic thinking and option search, a socio-ecological practice
scenario by definition is a synopsis of a possible (not probable) sequence of events
or course of action in socio-ecological practice an individual or group imagined (for
a generic scenario definition, see Merriam-Webster 2020a). In taking the long view
into alternative futures and imagining prudent courses of action, all socio-ecological
practice scenarios in the special issue articles are expected to be both strategic
and practical.
How may scenarists compose socio-ecological practice scenarios for the special issue?
The editor offers a few tips below for the scenario composers and writers (i.e., scenarists)
in their exercise of scenario composition and writing.
The focus, vantage point, and spatial scale
Socio-ecological practice by definition is the human action and social process that
take place in specific socio-ecological context to bring about a secure, harmonious,
and sustainable socio-ecological condition serving human beings’ need for survival,
development, and flourishing. It includes six distinct yet intertwining classes of
human action and social process—planning, design, construction, restoration, conservation,
and management (Xiang 2019a, p. 7).
In composing socio-ecological practice scenarios for their SEPR articles, the scenarists
may focus on one or any combination of the six components of socio-ecological practice
abovementioned; they may take any vantage points—political, social, ecological, cultural,
economic, historical, philosophical; they may choose a socio-ecological context at
any spatial scale, ranging from community/neighborhood, city/town, state/province,
to country/continent, and the world.
The time frame
“Scenarists often advise publicly that the (scenario) users should not take the time
frames within which the scenarios are formulated too precisely nor too seriously.
They certainly do not themselves” (Xiang and Clarke 2003, p. 900; parenthesis by the
author). For a recent example, in their 2018 best seller How democracies die, American
political scientists Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt compose three scenarios to
envision “three possible futures for a post-Trump America” with an unspecified time
frame (Levitsky and Ziblatt 2018, pp. 206–213).
In the same spirit, the time frame “the 2020s and beyond” in the special issue theme
serves as a general reference of future and should not be taken too strictly by our
scenarists.
References to start with
In their 2003 article The use of scenarios in land-use planning, Chinese-American
geographer and planning scholar Wei-Ning Xiang and British-American cartographer Keith
Clarke review the concepts, methods, and applications of scenarios in a specific field
of socio-ecological practice—land-use planning (Xiang and Clarke 2003). For the prospective
scenarists who are less familiar with the scenario literature, that article and Schwartz’s
1996 book together with a recent article by American planning scholars Uri Avin and
Robert Goodspeed (Avin & Goodspeed (2020), and Robert Goodspeed’s new book (Goodspeed
2020) can help jumpstart their adventure.
Good scenarios
According to Xiang and Clarke (2003), scenarios function both as a bridge that connects
the process of analysis/modeling with that of planning, and as a cognitive apparatus
that stretches people’s thinking and broadens their views in planning (Ibid., p. 888);
furthermore, to be effective, good scenarios should possess an ensemble of three essential
credentials: plausible unexpectedness, informational vividness, and cognitively ergonomic
design (Ibid., pp. 890–901).
The scenarists are encouraged to refer to these and other credentials in more recent
literature [e.g., in Goodspeed (2020)] in their endeavor to compose and write good
scenarios.
Perspicuous presentation
Perspicuity is the quality of being plain to the understanding because of clarity,
elegance, precision, and simplicity of presentation (Merriam-Webster 2020b). For many
scholars, represented by (but certainly not limited to) Scottish philosopher and political
economist Adam Smith (1723–1790), perspicuity is the gold standard for all their works
(Xiang 2020, p. 125). Our scenarists are encouraged to pursue perspicuity in presenting
their scenarios.
Article types
The journal Socio-Ecological Practice Research (SEPR) has a fleet of 11 article types
that fall into five clusters [See Table 1 in Xiang (2019b)]. Our scenarists may choose
the one that best fits their need.
Prospectus preparation and submission
Prospective authors should send a brief prospectus (250–350 words) in a word document
before or on October 15, 2020 to the SEPR editor in chief Wei-Ning Xiang at wxiang@uncc.edu.
The prospectus should outline
What the article is about—the aim(s), thesis, and scenarios to be composed;
Who the scenario users would be—the people who would benefit from and potentially
use the scenarios in their socio-ecological practice and research;
How the article contributes to the aims and scope of the special issue (as presented
in Sects. 1 and 2 above);
Whether a manuscript can be submitted by January 22, 2021 should the prospectus be
accepted.
The prospectuses will be selected on a rolling basis against the following criteria:
relevance to the theme of the special issue;
compliance with the scenario requirements outlined in Sect. 2;
writing ABC (accuracy, brevity, clarity);
single authorship is preferred, but multiple authorship considered;
commitment to meeting the manuscript submission deadline.
All questions should be directed to Wei-Ning Xiang at wxiang@uncc.edu; information
about the journal SEPR and the articles SEPR published can be found at https://www.springer.com/journal/42532.