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Predictions, uncertainty, and collective epistemic work : How projected futures informed and misinformed enactments of Covid-19

Olofsson, Tobias LU orcid (2025) In Social Studies of Science
Abstract
By connecting an uncertain present to a potential future, predictions and other forms of projected futures construct meaningful contexts on which actors can lean when seeking to act in the face of uncertainty. This article outlines the background and careers of many, and often contradicting, futures that informed the collective work to define and represent Covid-19 in Sweden during the first half of 2020. Through an analysis of press briefing transcripts, in-depth interviews with centrally placed informants, and a timeline of Covid-19–related events, debates, and policies in Sweden, this article outlines how enactments of Covid-19 evolved over time—from straightforward comparisons to past experiences, to repurposed models intended to make... (More)
By connecting an uncertain present to a potential future, predictions and other forms of projected futures construct meaningful contexts on which actors can lean when seeking to act in the face of uncertainty. This article outlines the background and careers of many, and often contradicting, futures that informed the collective work to define and represent Covid-19 in Sweden during the first half of 2020. Through an analysis of press briefing transcripts, in-depth interviews with centrally placed informants, and a timeline of Covid-19–related events, debates, and policies in Sweden, this article outlines how enactments of Covid-19 evolved over time—from straightforward comparisons to past experiences, to repurposed models intended to make the pandemic calculable, to survey-based extrapolations produced by the Public Health Agency. The article demonstrates how a combination of contextual factors and a continuously evolving knowledge base led some enactments to become more influential than others, allowing them to influence evolving decisions and strategies. The article highlights the role of competing voices and perspectives in the collective epistemic work performed during the pandemic and explores Covid-19 as a multiple entity composed of a patchwork of data and assumptions. Depending on what futures informed them, these enactments varied from catastrophic and dystopian, to hopeful promises of an eventual return to normality. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
in
Social Studies of Science
pages
27 pages
publisher
SAGE Publications
ISSN
0306-3127
DOI
10.1177/03063127251351336
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b9b68152-aea6-46b5-8d05-4843e5a3e0dd
date added to LUP
2025-07-07 13:49:47
date last changed
2025-07-22 14:32:54
@article{b9b68152-aea6-46b5-8d05-4843e5a3e0dd,
  abstract     = {{By connecting an uncertain present to a potential future, predictions and other forms of projected futures construct meaningful contexts on which actors can lean when seeking to act in the face of uncertainty. This article outlines the background and careers of many, and often contradicting, futures that informed the collective work to define and represent Covid-19 in Sweden during the first half of 2020. Through an analysis of press briefing transcripts, in-depth interviews with centrally placed informants, and a timeline of Covid-19–related events, debates, and policies in Sweden, this article outlines how enactments of Covid-19 evolved over time—from straightforward comparisons to past experiences, to repurposed models intended to make the pandemic calculable, to survey-based extrapolations produced by the Public Health Agency. The article demonstrates how a combination of contextual factors and a continuously evolving knowledge base led some enactments to become more influential than others, allowing them to influence evolving decisions and strategies. The article highlights the role of competing voices and perspectives in the collective epistemic work performed during the pandemic and explores Covid-19 as a multiple entity composed of a patchwork of data and assumptions. Depending on what futures informed them, these enactments varied from catastrophic and dystopian, to hopeful promises of an eventual return to normality.}},
  author       = {{Olofsson, Tobias}},
  issn         = {{0306-3127}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{07}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE Publications}},
  series       = {{Social Studies of Science}},
  title        = {{Predictions, uncertainty, and collective epistemic work : How projected futures informed and misinformed enactments of Covid-19}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/03063127251351336}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/03063127251351336}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}