Professor Carlos Lopez-Galviz
Professor of History and Social FuturesResearch Overview
My research contributes to understand how we can and should connect history to social futures. My work has interrogated and explored processes of urbanisation in the past and today, including how to make change fair, just, and inclusive, whether through applied transformatiive collaborative research or through new kinds of historiography. I am interested in research that is place-based, comparative, combining disciplinary rigour with cross-disciplinary openness, and, where possible, enabling positive change.
Career Details
Before coming to Lancaster (in 2015), I was a Lecturer and Research Fellow at the School of Advanced Study, University of London where, among other things, I taught in the MA in Understanding and Securing Human Rights, led the AHRC-funded project Reconfiguring Ruins, and co-convened the Metropolitan History Seminar of the Institute of Historical Research.
My studies and academic career have taken me across disciplines (architecture, human geography and history) and continents, from Cali (Colombia), where I was born, to Amsterdam, Berlin, Paris, London, and Shanghai.
Current Teaching
I convene LICA340 Advanced Design Interacions, LICA431 Design Directions, and LICA480 Environmental Crises and Societal Change.
LICA480 invites MA students to the reflect on and engage with the dissonance of temporal scales, namely, the timescales of natural systems, of the built and social environment, and those inherent in how we, as humans, envision and understand worlds in crisis and worlds in change.
I am also coordinating with Professor Deborah Sutton the new MA in Sustainability and Global Environmental Futures.
Research Interests
My research looks at change in particular places at particular times in their history, and does so by interrogating three kinds of relationships:
The relationship between cities and infrastructure, which I have explored through a 'past futures' lens, namely, by considering what visions of the future of cities like London and Paris emerged in the nineteenth century and the role that new technologies played in their making (see, for example, the monograph Cities, Railways, Modernities,2019). More recently, and as part of the UKRI-GCRF GREAT project (2020-24), I explored the off-grid city in Colombia and Cuba. Thanks to a highly successful international collaboration, we were able to identify the specific challenges which residents of the informal city face to enhance their access to basic infrastructure. This is a project that is very close to my heart and, while funding is finished, it continues to inspire my thinking for current and future projects. Further details are available from the project website: https://www.lancaster.ac.uk/great/
The relationships across sustainability, agency and divergent temporal scales. This involves ‘unthinking the thinkable’, that is, relearning the process of what times and which timescales we should consider when imagining and helping shape better social futures. I have developed this approach through theoretical work (as per the Routledge Handbook of Social Futures, 2022) and through interdisciplinary collaboration seeking to Inspire Futures for Zero Carbon Mobility (INFUZE, funded by the UKRI-EPSRC 2024-29) in ways that engage creatively with citizens to envision alternative futures for transport and places.
Last and no less important is the relationship between ruins and utopias, which has involved research projects (Reconfiguring Ruins, AHRC, 2015-16; Mobile Utopias: 1851-2051, AHRC, 2016), publications (the article Beyond Ruinenlust in Geohumanities, 2017; the special issue of Mobilities, 2020) and collaborations with the Museum of London Archaeology and arts organisations such as the New Bridge Project in Newcastle, and Art Gene in Barrow in Furness.
PhD Supervision Interests
I welcome proposals in any topic that speak to the broad areas of history, urban studies, and arts and heritage. I encourage proposals that are comparative, engage in a dialogue across disciplines, and have an international dimension. I particularly welcome projects that explore the relationship between history and the future.
Inspiring Futures for Zero Carbon Mobility (INFUZE)
31/07/2024 → 30/07/2029
Research
Reimagining research practices: towards a sustainable, ethical and inclusive future
01/05/2024 → 30/04/2026
Research
GCRF and Newton Consolidation Accounts Lancaster University
01/04/2022 → 31/03/2023
Research
GCRF: Gridding Equitable Urban Futures in Areas of Transition (GREAT) in Cali, Colombia and Havana, Cuba
01/04/2020 → 30/06/2024
Research
Cultural Politics of Sustainable Urban Mobility, 1890 to the present
15/09/2015 → 15/12/2018
Research
Senate House Revealed
01/04/2015 → 30/11/2015
Other
Reconfiguring Ruins
01/10/2014 → 12/07/2016
Other
Past Futures
01/05/2014 → …
Research
Pumping Time: Geographies of Temporal Infrastructure in Fin-de-Siècle Paris
01/09/2011 → 30/09/2013
Other
Integrated National Transport Strategy: A call for ideas - Response as an organisation
Influence on Policy, Practice, Patients & the Public
Anticipation 2024
Participation in conference - Academic
TEA Talks
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Waste Not: Climate emergency and voices of informality from Cali, Colombia and Havana, Cuba
Public Lecture/ Debate/Seminar
International Sustainability Transitions Conference
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
To grid or not to grid?
Invited talk
History and Policy series
Other
Construction des futurs urbains: enjeux pour la recherche
Invited talk
How can understanding the past help inform the transition to net-zero?
Public Lecture/ Debate/Seminar
The Past Futures of Cities and Mobility
Invited talk
History and Policy series
Other
History and Policy series
Other
Journal of Transport History (Journal)
Editorial activity
Department for Transport (External organisation)
Membership of committee
International Association for the History of Transport, Traffic and Mobility (T2M) (External organisation)
Membership of committee
Violence, health and everyday (non)life: Gaza and beyond
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
The Past Futures of Cities and Mobility: A View from History
Invited talk
The Past Futures of Cities and Mobility: A Humanist View
Invited talk
T2M annual conference
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
The pursuit of global urban history
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Social Futures: The View from Lancaster
Invited talk
Memories of the Future 2
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Technical University of Munich
Visiting an external academic institution
Department for Transport (External organisation)
Other Membership
African Centre for Cities
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
European Asoociation for Urban History
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Futures of a Complex World
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Anticipation 2017
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Mobile Utopia
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Transport Systems Catapult (External organisation)
Member of Advisory Panel
AHRC conference Past Matters, Research Futures
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
8th World Archaeological Congress
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Education and Global Cities: Horizons for Contemporary University
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Exploring the past to understand the present and anticipate the future
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
- CeMoRe - Centre for Mobilities Research
- Cultures
- Evaluation
- Imagination Lancaster
- Institute for Social Futures - Leadership Team
- ISF Anniversary Lecturers