
[blindspot]

We inhabit a moment often described as ‘polycrisis’: a convergence of multiple, temporally overlapping systemic disruptions. The frameworks utilised to interpret its constitutive crises – and thus to inform attempts to solve them – often struggle to account for their inherently psychological roots. This is the blind spot at the heart of policymaking, and too often we lose sight of it. [blindspot] is born out of the realisation, that policies can only succeed when citizens view them as legitimate, when organisations can adapt to them, and when human behaviour aligns with their aims. [blindspot] aims to bridge the gap between policy and lived realities by drawing on psychological insights to offer analyses of the ‘polycrisis’, its political landscape, and the minds that shape it.


