Authors
Peter Søgaard Jørgensen, Raf EV Jansen, Daniel I Avila Ortega, Lan Wang-Erlandsson, Jonathan F Donges, Henrik Österblom, Per Olsson, Magnus Nyström, Steven J Lade, Thomas Hahn, Carl Folke, Garry D Peterson, Anne-Sophie Crépin
Publication date
2024/1/1
Journal
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
Volume
379
Issue
1893
Pages
20220261
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
The Anthropocene is characterized by accelerating change and global challenges of increasing complexity. Inspired by what some have called a polycrisis, we explore whether the human trajectory of increasing complexity and influence on the Earth system could become a form of trap for humanity. Based on an adaptation of the evolutionary traps concept to a global human context, we present results from a participatory mapping. We identify 14 traps and categorize them as either global, technology or structural traps. An assessment reveals that 12 traps (86%) could be in an advanced phase of trapping with high risk of hard-to-reverse lock-ins and growing risks of negative impacts on human well-being. Ten traps (71%) currently see growing trends in their indicators. Revealing the systemic nature of the polycrisis, we assess that Anthropocene traps often interact reinforcingly (45% of pairwise interactions), and …
Total citations
Scholar articles
P Søgaard Jørgensen, REV Jansen, DI Avila Ortega… - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 2024