Ah yes, I don't want to steal credit!
It's been around since the 70s, but got itself popularized around Davos of all places. Still useful, despite those slightly suspect origins!
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2023/03/polycrisis-adam-tooze-historian-explains/
Keep the kitty!
Some of those circles are difficult to concretize--like "erosion of social cohesion". Vitally important, but so deeply interwoven with other factors that the best one can do is to remember that some challenges *are* best addressed collectively.
When there's more socioeconomic opportunity, fewer displacement pressures, and more reliable information economies, that "social cohesion" issue should ease in lockstep with the rest.
But we *have* to think holistically first!
"But we *have* to think holistically first! "
Exactly! And any map, even a bad one can be a starting point for such discussions.
The motives and credibility of anyone who attends Davos though is very questionable.
100% re Davos.
Tooze is a strange one. I get his newsletter on economics/finance issues, but most of it is behind paywall, so I essentially just glance at the subject titles for a hint as to what his class of economic participant deems important from day to day. π
@MLClark
I love concept maps, although I may not be replacing my "Hang in there" kitten poster with this one.
It's a great way to view things though, and breaking some of those connections between convergent crises is probably a way to start defusing.