PROSPERA's scientific activities focused on four major research areas:
1. Theoretical Foundations of Post-growth
PROSPERA reviewed and critically re‑elaborated the critique of science, technology and innovation (STI) discourses coming from disciplines such as STS, political ecology, ecological economics and post‑development studies.
2. Organizational Settings for Post-growth
PROSPERA focused on understanding the organisational settings and conditions that enable or disable post‑growth innovation in companies, co‑operatives and other organisations. The research team conducted case studies in Germany, the UK, France, Spain and Italy, using a mix of qualitative methods including ethnography, semi‑structured interviews, document analysis and participatory research.
3. Systems and Social Movements
PROSPERA examined social movements as agents of change. In particular, the team conducted in‑depth ethnographic case studies of the student movement End Fossil Fuel, the Right to Repair movement, and the Anti‑Eucalyptus brigades in Galicia, northern Spain.
4. Reconfiguring STI Systems for Post-growth
PROSPERA investigated the configuration of research institutions to understand built‑in growth lock‑ins. The team conducted ethnographic research at the EU's JRC in Ispra (Italy), as well as extensive fieldwork in STI institutions in the EU, India and the USA.
Over five years, the team produced 12 scientific papers, 2 books (Critical Perspectives on Growth by University of Vigo Press and Post‑growth Innovation by Bristol University Press), 1 conference proceedings, and 3 PhD theses. Notably, in 2025 the group published a special issue in the journal Science, Technology and Society titled “Science, Technology and Innovation for a Post‑growth Society”, which summarises key theoretical and empirical debates around post‑growth. The project also launched a dedicated website and social media accounts on LinkedIn and YouTube, disseminating PROSPERA’s outcomes freely to a wider audience.
Team members actively presented their work at major international conferences, including 4S, EASST, STS Graz, and the European Ecological Economics conference. The lab also organised and chaired the ESEE‑Degrowth 2024 Conference, producing proceedings and video recordings of all sessions, which are freely available online.
The Principal Investigator laid the foundations for an international network on this topic. Over the project’s duration, the research group hosted more than eight visiting researchers (both early‑stage and experienced), organised 34 internal workshops, and held nine external seminars open to the general public.