CRC TRR 228 Project Z05/Ö
Negotiating African Futures
An Exhibition Project
Z05/Ö Negotiating African Futures
Vision
The exhibition project “Negotiating African Futures” weaves together and brings individual stories, regional developments, global challenges, and shared visions of the future to a broad audience in an immersive, decolonial, and participatory manner.
Project Summary
The exhibition project “Negotiating African Futures” represents a collaborative effort between the CRC228 “Future Rural Africa” and the Futurium – House of Futures in Berlin. Its overarching goal is to translate key findings from the CRC228 into engaging science communication, making research on rural African future-making accessible to broad audiences in Europe and Africa in the form of an exhibition project in the Futurium. By embracing insights from more than ten years of collaborative research the exhibition project facilitates a reflection process within the CRC228 about its key messages and invites a wider audience to reflect on the interconnectedness of futures and future-making in and beyond rural Africa. The exhibition does not aim to comprehensively represent “African futures” but rather to foster reflection on the diverse visions, challenges, and global connections shaping future-making processes. The four main objectives include: (1) Present exemplary research experiences and findings to a broad audience; (2) Raise awareness of diverse and alternative futures in Africa; (3) Foster a shared understanding of Afro-European futures; (4) Highlight individuals and communities from the African continent as active agents and “future-makers”. The exhibition project aims to create a space for envisioning and enacting African futures rooted in multiplicity, solidarity, respect, and mutual learning, while fostering a shared understanding of perspectives on the grand challenges of the 21st century. This entails the gradual development and translation of the CRC228 themes and insights into an appropriate curatorial concept and exhibition formats in close collaboration with African scientists, artists and communities, incorporating participatory “worldbuilding” workshops. Major themes – infrastructures, conservation, intensification, and financing – will be illustrated through interactive installations and case studies from Kenya, Namibia, and Tanzania. The final exhibition will open at the Futurium in 2029, with satellite activities in Africa. Core work packages include conceptual alignment, narrative development, production of visual media, exhibition implementation, and long-term archiving. Feedback from “critical friends” from different African countries and the diaspora will guide all project phases.
Goals
The exhibition project aims to create a space for envisioning and enacting African futures rooted in multiplicity, solidarity, respect, and mutual learning, while fostering a shared understanding of the grand challenges of the 21st century. This entails a close collaboration with African scientists, artists and communities, incorporating participatory “worldbuilding” workshops in order to gradually develop and translate the CRC 228 themes and insights into an appropriate curatorial concept and exhibition formats geared towards a broad audience.
Content Foci
The exhibition illustrates key themes of CRC 228 through selected case studies:
- “How elephants make politics”: conservation and human wildlife coexistence in KAZA TFC
- “Full steam ahead”: energy futures around Lake Baringo and beyond
- “Rosy futures”: global connections and local contestations in the Lake Naivasha economy
- “Water dreams and nightmares”: contested water infrastructures in Morogoro and Pwani/Tanzania
Locations
- Central Exhibition in Futurium, Berlin
- Satellite activities in Africa






