The trend in governance right now is moving from 'do you have a benefit?' to 'is your benefit shock-responsive?' That’s the frontier.
Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco

Lena: You know, Jackson, I was looking at some global stats today, and it’s wild—nearly half the world’s population, about 3.8 billion people, have absolutely no social protection.
Jackson: It’s a staggering gap, especially when you realize that the countries with the least protection, like Haiti and Mozambique, are often the ones getting hit hardest and first by climate disasters.
Lena: Exactly! And that’s why this shift toward "Adaptive Social Protection," or ASP, is becoming such a massive governance trend. It’s not just about traditional safety nets anymore; it’s about merging social policy with disaster risk management and climate adaptation.
Jackson: Right, it’s about moving from reacting after a crisis to building systems that can anticipate and absorb shocks before they even happen. It’s a total rethink of how governments handle resilience.
Lena: So let’s dive into how these systems actually work on the ground.