I grew up in Lebanon — a country that has lived more disruption, collapse and reinvention than most places on earth will ever know. That experience gave me something that no curriculum could: a visceral understanding of how systems fall apart, how communities hold together, and why the difference between the two is almost never what conventional wisdom says it is.
I left, as so many did, for better opportunities. And I have spent thirty years since then working across Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Africa and North America — inside sovereign megaprogrammes, ministerial reform processes, corporate boardrooms and multilateral institutions — trying to understand what makes systems endure. Not just survive. Endure, and grow stronger through what they face.
The answer I have arrived at is antifragility, as coined and described by Nassim Nicholas Taleb. And the framework I have built around it — the Antifragile Organisation and the Antifragile City and the Cathedral Approach — is not a theory. It is a methodology forged across thirty years of navigating complex political ecosystems, aligning governance with capital, and stewarding multidisciplinary teams across cultures and crises.
"I am still an optimist. I have seen enough of the world's failures to know they are never inevitable, and enough of its recoveries to know that the future is not something that happens to us. It is something we build together."
Today I advise boards, C-suites, sovereign institutions, mayors and ministers on how to design organisations, institutions and cities that are genuinely antifragile — interconnected, collaborative, decentralised and human-centric. I work at the intersection of strategy, governance and long-range thinking, and I bring to that work something that I believe matters as much as the methodology: the perspective of someone who has seen the world from many sides, and who remains, despite everything, an optimist about what we can build together.
I am a polyglot — speaking Arabic, English, French natively and Dutch fluently. That fluidity of language has given me an elasticity of mind and has enabled me to see and comprehend the in-between spaces as well as the overarching ecosystems. I believe that the capacity to think and convene across cultures is not incidental to this work. It is the work.
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