Insights | | The slow forces behind this year’s fast crises

The slow forces behind this year’s fast crises

11 March 2026

The article argues that today’s rapid global crises (political, ecological, and social) are the visible outcomes of long-building systemic pressures. Using complexity science and systemic risk analysis, it highlights how understanding these deep drivers can help societies both anticipate crises and accelerate positive, transformative change.

Disclaimer: This article is republished with permission from the authors. The article was originally published on resilience’s website and can be found here. Any views expressed in this article are those of the original author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Altiorem.

Header image “A Boy Confronts Egyptian Military Police South of Tahrir Square – A Potentially Tragic Disparity of Power and Equipment.” by Alisdare Hickson, CC BY-SA 2.0

“Things are changing fast”. It’s a sentiment a lot of us are saying these days. And for good reason. Just a few weeks into and 2026 has already been marked by many (many) news moments that can leave us feeling blindsided. Catastrophic, once-in-a-generation events  seem like a daily occurrence now, as numerous species and lifeforms have disappeared from the face of the earth—with humans poised to be next? Meanwhile longstanding systems have been eradicated virtually overnight.

 

Amazonia Real from Manaus AM, Brasil, CC by 2.0 .jpg

 

But what looks like sudden disruption is actually only the visible crest of decades-long, slow-moving shifts. What gets lost in the shuffle are the structural and system dynamics that brought us here.

The problem is that, if we only react to the most dramatic and immediate events, we’ll never be able to address the deep roots and underlying system dynamics that produced them.

Whether it’s the overt slide to authoritarianism and nationalism away from multilateralism in many parts of the world, or the wave of so-called Gen-Z Protests in Morocco, Madagascar, Nepal, and elsewhere, or the near daily stories about a major ecological catastrophe, everything feels immediate and sudden and pressing.

Even the climate “tipping points” that are being breached—Amazon dieback, coral reefs degradation, or the Atlantic currents reaching a critical threshold of no going back—follow the same process; it only takes a moment to transgress safe and sustainable planetary boundaries, and getting to that point takes decades.

In complexity science, we explore how small events, perhaps barely perceptible, can combine over time to produce major changes within and across systems (the proverbial butterfly effect). And the pace of these changes doesn’t always stay constant, but can accelerate as forces build and converge. We call this process an exponential curve, where small and slow shifts—the ‘long tail’—suddenly become big and fast change—the ‘steep’ curve.

Imagine for example turning on the heat under a pot of water. For a long time, it seems like nothing is happening, but under the lid pressure keeps building until it reaches the ‘tipping point’ where water starts spilling over the sides.

All of the turbulence we have witnessed in 2025 alone, as dramatic and dizzying as it has been, is likewise the sudden ‘boiling over’ of long-building pressures. These things do not arise overnight.

 

 

The Covid-19 pandemic, for example, was a sudden and, in many ways, unexpected global crisis; yet, the virus and our (often inadequate) societal responses to it were the product of systemic risks and stresses that had been building for decades. Years of environmental degradation, increased mobility and connectivity, erosion of public services coupled with cost-of-living increases, and a host of other interconnected drivers made our global systems vulnerable to such a virus, ready to boil over like a pot of water over high heat.

Even the rise to power of today’s populist and authoritarian leaders around the world is symptomatic of accumulated pressures in a complex, non-linear system, rather than their cause. All of the frustrations, polarization, and immiseration that produces populist leaders and their wide support networks take years to grow. We just don’t usually see it happening until after the shifts have already happened.

We know from studying the past that societies accumulate stress along fairly predictable, measurable dimensions: inequality (a defining hallmark), institutional erosion, and the loss of social trust often for decades before. Eventually, the accumulated pressure sends social systems past their boiling point into full blown crisis.

Traditional approaches to understanding risk, however, offer too narrow a view to expose all of the complex interconnections, and long-building stresses drive the accelerating crises we face today. That is why a new field is emerging: systemic risk analysis. This draws from the tools and perspective of complexity science to offer the broad scope needed to make sense of all the complex, multifarious forces that drive crises.

But this field isn’t just good for pointing out all the ways the world is going wrong. It also allows us to identify the more positive and hopeful trends, highlighting impactful and transformative responses being taken that are helping to relieve these stresses and make meaningful impacts today.

We see for instance: well-being and justice focussed economies embraced in New Zealand, Costa Rica, Mexico, among others; legal frameworks enshrining the rights of future generations and of non-human species ratified in Wales and Ecuador; and, community-led sustainable farming practices growing up in climate ravished regions in India, Uganda, and elsewhere.

These may feel disconnected, potentially even random, but they share many hallmarks of adaptive systemic risk response such as a focus on equity and justice, systems transformation, inclusivity of multiple worldviews, and interdependence among and between species and our natural world. If we nourish, sustain, and weave together such responses, we can drive cascades of virtuous change in the same way as long-building stresses generate accelerating disasters.

None of this is to let “bad actors” off the hook; rather, it’s a call to recognize the deeper roots of our present crises and address those, to spark the virtuous cycles that we need to repair our damaged societal and ecological systems.

 

Barrier Reef anemone fish in bleached anenome. By John Turnbull, CC by-NC-SA 2.0

 

Part of the challenge is the need to radically rethink risk and challenge our mental models to push back on all the ways we currently conceive of our present systems and crisis responses.

As we look ahead to 2026, there will sadly continue to be shocking, horrific events dominating news headlines. But there will also be opportunities for positive action, whether a national election, a global summit, or local community coalition action.

Systemic risk analysis allows us to fully comprehend the long-tail of all the crises peaking this year. But it also reveals how we can turn these exponential curves around, accelerating just as fast and as far in the opposite direction.

Ultimately, fast changes grab the headlines, but if we keep an eye on the deep drivers, we can effect the changes needed to address the crises we’re now facing.

Relevant library resources

Planetary solvency – finding our balance with nature

Institute and Faculty of Actuaries (IFoA)
This report outlines how climate and nature risks threaten the Earth system that underpins economies and societies. It proposes a Planetary Solvency framework, using risk-led assessment principles to inform policymakers of escalating systemic risks, tipping points and mitigation needs, emphasising the urgency of realistic global risk management to avoid severe disruption.
Research
1 January 2025

Climate endgame: Exploring catastrophic climate change scenarios

This report explores the potential for worldwide societal collapse and human extinction due to anthropogenic climate change. It argues that this topic has not been given enough consideration despite existing evidence of catastrophic outcomes. The proposed research agenda seeks to understand the likelihood and mechanisms of such events and their implications for policy.
Research
29 July 2022

Transforming global finance for climate action: Addressing misaligned incentives and unlocking opportunities

Global Sustainable Investment Alliance
The report identifies systemic barriers preventing the flow of capital to climate-positive projects. It introduces the PIVOT framework, outlining policy vacuum, misaligned incentives, valuation challenges, inactive ownership, and transition misalignment. The report provides actionable solutions for policymakers, investors, and stakeholders to align finance with the Paris Agreement.
Research
14 November 2024

Global assessment report on disaster risk reduction - our world at risk: Transforming governance for a resilient future

United Nations (UN)
The report explores the challenges faced in managing systemic risk, the complexity of decision-making in volatile situations and offers solutions for improving risk communication.
Research
20 July 2022

A new economy: Exploring the root causes of the polycrisis and the principles to unlock a sustainable future

Ernst & Young (EY)
The report examines the systemic flaws of the current economic model, highlighting ecological, social, and geoeconomic crises. It proposes transitioning to a regenerative economy based on principles of sufficiency, circularity, systems thinking, equity, and redefining value to achieve sustainable and equitable growth.
Research
31 May 2024

Towards a systemic understanding of sustainable well-being for all in cities: A conceptual framework

The purpose of this framework is to guide the design and evaluation of public policies, as well as provide tools for conducting thorough assessments and monitoring progress across various socio-ecological dimensions of sustainable well-being in different urban settings on a universal scale.
Research
3 January 2023
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