Navigating Geopolitical Risks in Anthropocene Governance for Professionals
The Anthropocene—the current geological epoch defined by human dominance over Earth's systems—rewrites the rulebook for geopolitical risk. For profess...
8 articles in this category
The Anthropocene—the current geological epoch defined by human dominance over Earth's systems—rewrites the rulebook for geopolitical risk. For profess...
Governance systems designed for the stable Holocene are fracturing under Anthropocene pressures. Climate volatility, supply chain disruptions, and rap...
When a regional climate adaptation board spends six months negotiating a shared risk register, only to have a flash flood bypass every agreed priority...
In the Anthropocene, scarcity is no longer a temporary market signal—it is a structural condition. Fresh water, rare earth elements, stable climate co...
Introduction: Why Traditional Governance Fails Our Shared ResourcesIn my practice spanning over a decade of consulting with governments and communitie...
The conversation around geoengineering has shifted. It is no longer about whether the technologies will be researched, but about who will control them...
For years, governance discourse around tipping points has been dominated by fear: climate thresholds, ecosystem collapses, and runaway feedback loops ...
We have all felt it: the news cycle delivers another collapse—a flood here, a tariff war there, a democratic norm eroding somewhere else. The temptati...