January 2025
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25 Reads
System Dynamics Review
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January 2025
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25 Reads
System Dynamics Review
December 2024
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16 Reads
Global Sustainability
January 2024
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825 Reads
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141 Citations
Global Sustainability
Multiple global crises – including the pandemic, climate change, and Russia's war on Ukraine – have recently linked together in ways that are significant in scope, devastating in effect, but poorly understood. A growing number of scholars and policymakers characterize the situation as a ‘polycrisis’. Yet this neologism remains poorly defined. We provide the concept with a substantive definition, highlight its value-added in comparison to related concepts, and develop a theoretical framework to explain the causal mechanisms currently entangling many of the world's crises. In this framework, a global crisis arises when one or more fast-moving trigger events combine with slow-moving stresses to push a global system out of its established equilibrium and into a volatile and harmful state of disequilibrium. We then identify three causal pathways – common stresses, domino effects, and inter-systemic feedbacks – that can connect multiple global systems to produce synchronized crises. Drawing on current examples, we show that the polycrisis concept is a valuable tool for understanding ongoing crises, generating actionable insights, and opening avenues for future research. Non-technical summary The term ‘polycrisis’ appears with growing frequently to capture the interconnections between global crises, but the word lacks substantive content. In this article, we convert it from an empty buzzword into a conceptual framework and research program that enables us to better understand the causal linkages between contemporary crises. We draw upon the intersection of climate change, the covid-19 pandemic, and Russia's war in Ukraine to illustrate these causal interconnections and explore key features of the world's present polycrisis. Technical summary Multiple global crises – including the pandemic, climate change, and Russia's war on Ukraine – have recently linked together in ways that are significant in scope, devastating in effect, but poorly understood. A growing number of scholars and policymakers characterize the situation as a ‘polycrisis’. Yet this neologism remains poorly defined. We provide the concept with a substantive definition, highlight its value-added in comparison to related concepts, and develop a theoretical framework to explain the causal mechanisms currently entangling many of the world's crises. In this framework, a global crisis arises when one or more fast-moving trigger events combines with slow-moving stresses to push a global system out of its established equilibrium and into a volatile and harmful state of disequilibrium. We then identify three causal pathways – common stresses, domino effects, and inter-systemic feedbacks – that can connect multiple global systems to produce synchronized crises. Drawing on current examples, we show that the polycrisis concept is a valuable tool for understanding ongoing crises, generating actionable insights, and opening avenues for future research. Social media summary No longer a mere buzzword, the ‘polycrisis’ concept highlights causal interactions among crises to help navigate a tumultuous future.
January 2023
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111 Reads
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30 Citations
SSRN Electronic Journal
... In this regard, futures thinking aims to help policymakers and decisionmakers proactively anticipate changes, recognize opportunities, and ease the transition toward desirable futures (Canina et al., 2022). In our current century of "polycrisis" (Lawrence et al., 2024), disruptions, and uncertainties, Futures Thinking is gaining more prominence, especially as evidenced by the recently adopted United Nations' Pact for the Future (2024). Notably, its second annex, titled "Declaration on Future Generations," encourages the world to embrace foresight and long-term thinking in dealing with global complex challenges. ...
Reference:
Tropical Futurisms: Thinking Futures
January 2024
Global Sustainability
... Even sustainable growth and the fashion for sustainable entrepreneurship or eco-entrepreneurship have become "dangerous contradictions in terms" to generalize from Douthwaite (1992, p.286). Being addicted to these growth myths has blinded most entrepreneurship scholarship to the extent to which entrepreneurship is implicated in what has been described as the polycrisis (Lawrence et al., 2024). Moreover, it has resulted in neglect of the nature and role of entrepreneurship in a post-growth economy. ...
January 2023
SSRN Electronic Journal