In the 1960s, an increased awareness of environmental degradation and overpopulation led to a surging interest in the field of futures studies in Sweden. In 1972 the
government's working group for futures research, headed by
Alva Myrdal, published the official report
Att välja framtid: ett underlag för diskussion och överväganden om framtidsstudier i Sverige ("To choose a future: a basis for discussion and deliberations on futures studies in Sweden"). As a result of this work the government chose to set up the Secretariat for Futures Studies, which was initially directly subordinate to the ministerial cabinet. This secretariat's studies were to function as a foundation for strategic planning and public debate. The first head of the organization was the mathematician
Lars Ingelstam. In 1980 the Secretariat for Futures Studies was reconstituted as a unit within the
Swedish Research Council, and in 1982 the Secretariat launched the journal
Framtider. In 1987 the government decided to reorganize the Secretariat as an independent foundation, which became the Institute for Futures Studies. == Leadership ==