Because we live in an increasingly complex multidimensional interconnected world, the economic, social, and environmental mess we are in is an intricacy of interconnected wicked problems. The characteristics of wicked problems as systems thinkers have described them are that they cannot be formulated in a definitive way because there are many different perspectives and possible narratives for a same problem. There are multiple points of intervention as problems are inter-related and can be symptoms of other problems. There are no absolute right or wrong solutions: solutions may be contrary and involve trade-offs. There is no history or proven practice and expert knowledge to refer to, data is uncertain and often missing, and the best information necessary to understand the problems is distributed in the contexts affected by it. This requires navigating diversity and complexity.