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Lea Janna Jac­ob­sen

Research Assistant

Subjects
Circular economy Qualitative methods Sustainability Culture Ethics Philosophy

Primary research areas

Traditional craftmanship and cultural heritage

My research interests focus on the valorisation of traditional craftsmanship and the preservation of cultural heritage. I currently manage the Horizon Europe project Hephaestus – Heritage in Europe: New Technologies in Craft for Preserving and Innovating Futures.

Alternative modes of organizing

My research focuses on how craft practices can demonstrate alternative ways of organizing and drive sustainable transformation in systems of consumption and production.

Speculative design methodologies and art-based research

I am interested in how speculative design methodologies and art-based research can reveal different ways of conceptualizing and thinking about alternative futures, taking into consideration more-than-human approaches and non-human matter.

Craftmanship and making as a sustainable practice

My research interests focus on the valorisation of traditional craftsmanship and the preservation of cultural heritage. I currently manage the Horizon Europe project Hephaestus – Heritage in Europe: New Technologies in Craft for Preserving and Innovating Futures.I am particularly interested in how alternative modes of organizing can drive sustainable transformations in systems of consumption and production, as well as the role both human and non-human agents play in shaping ethical values. I am also interested in how these questions might be approached through art-based research and speculative design methodologies. 

I hold an academic background in Philosophy and Business Administration (CBS). My thesis examined how neurodiversity challenges conventional business paradigms, drawing on Foucauldian theory. Specifically, it investigated how neurodiverse individuals disrupt normative conceptions of the ‘self’, offering a critical counter-narrative to the logic of neoliberalism. In doing so, the neurodiverse perspective opens up new possibilities for businesses to rethink their purpose beyond traditional performance metrics. 

Recent research projects

Heritage in EuroPe: new tecHnologies in crAft for prEServing and innovaTing fUtureS (HEPHAESTUS)

The project aims to research, preserve and innovate craft sectors to deliver a cutting-edge, creative, and sustainable technology-driven economy based on cultural heritage.
Hephaestus

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