About [blindspot]

At their core, however, most of these coinciding crises are inherently human: produced by our behavioural patterns and experienced through our mental frameworks. They are therefore inseparable from our psychological processes. Yet the frameworks used to interpret these crises remain narrow: lawyers, economists, and policymakers seeking to address them often struggle to account for their inherently psychological roots. As behavioural scientists have long noted, policy design that disregards  how individuals actually think and feel often fails to achieve its goals, regardless of its technical merit (Thaler & Sunstein, 2008).

This is the blind spot at the heart of contemporary policymaking, and too often we lose sight of it, focusing on yet another crisis. [blindspot] is born out of this realisation. Policies can only succeed when citizens view them as legitimate, when organisations can adapt to them, and when human behaviour aligns with their aims. All three conditions are fundamentally psychological in nature. [blindspot] aims to bridge the gap between policy and lived realities by drawing on psychological insights, offering analyses of the political landscape, the ‘polycrisis,’ and the minds that shape it.