System Traps

Categories
Systems
Sources
Thinking in Systems

Recurring structures that reliably produce problematic behavior regardless of who is involved: systemic archetypes such as policy resistance, tragedy of the commons, drift to low performance, escalation, success to the successful, addiction (shifting the burden), rule beating, and seeking the wrong goal.

Why it Matters

The same dysfunctional patterns appear across utterly different domains because they come from structure, not context. Recognizing the archetype tells you both why the problem keeps happening and where the way out lies.

Signals

  • A problem that resists every fix you throw at it.
  • Outcomes that get worse despite real effort.
  • A pattern you have already seen in a completely unrelated field.

Benefits

Acts as a diagnostic library: naming the trap points directly to its known escape, usually restructuring loops, realigning goals, or restoring missing information.

Risks

Treating each instance as unique and re-solving it from scratch; applying symptomatic fixes that relieve the surface and deepen the underlying trap.

Tensions

The escape usually requires changing goals or structure, which is high-leverage but hard, while the tempting fix is a quick parameter tweak, which is easy but ineffective.

Examples

See Tragedy of the Commons, Shifting the Burden, and Policy Resistance for specific traps and their escapes.