Posts Tagged: climate policy

Across climate governance, there is a persistent assumption that with enough data, better models, and stronger coordination, the problem can and will be sufficiently understood and managed. This assumption is always in the background, and it shapes how issues are defined, how evidence is treated, and what kinds of responses are considered legitimate. Beyond complexity

Read More

If climate governance operates within an informational threshold of what it can recognise and act upon, then an uncomfortable question follows. What does this mean for those working inside the system? Much of governance practice is built around clarity. This means: Define the issue. Gather the evidence. Develop options. Make decisions. This works well when

Read More

If climate governance is caught in a closed loop of doing more of the same, just with greater urgency, the obvious question might be: What defines the boundaries of that loop? Or why are some risks recognised and acted upon, while others remain effectively invisible? The limits of governance In practice, governance does not respond

Read More

Why does the response to climate change so often take the same form? Greater political will. More data. Better communication. More ambitious targets. Greater urgency. These are the familiar calls at conferences, in reports, and across policy discussions. Can you learn from within a pattern? From the inside, climate governance doesn’t look irrational. If the

Read More

Note: The next seven essays are not a view from nowhere. I’ve spent decades working with governance systems as a sustainability consultant, a strategic adviser, a sectoral representative and now as a researcher. I am a long-term participant in the processes I’m now trying to understand. That position is part of the argument: because what

Read More

The term impossible object (or hyperobject) is sometimes used to describe something that exceeds our logic, our available grammar or our institutional reach. Climate change, radioactive waste, microplastics and artificial intelligence feel like impossible objects. It doesn’t matter what we say or try to do about them; they have an essence that exceeds our grasp.

Read More