The author examines the use of the polycrisis concept in public policy and administration research, highlighting its potential for addressing complex challenges but noting a frequent lack of conceptual clarity and analytical depth. Polycrises are often treated as static and uniform, despite their dynamic and multifaceted nature. To strengthen its application, the author proposes clearer conceptual foundations, improved analytical approaches, and revised research designs, introducing a framework of four polycrisis subtypes: tightly coupled, loosely coupled, cascading, and time-congruent, to support more nuanced analysis.
Beyond the Buzzword: Rethinking Polycrises in Public Policy and Administration Research

Author(s)
Bishoy L. Zaki
Publication Date
24 June 2025
Publisher
Risk, Hazards & Crisis in Public Policy
DOI / URL

Resource Type
Academic Journal Article
Resource Theme
Theory Building