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Join the Risk Systems Analyst reserve pool for future opportunities in risk systems analysis, systemic risk, systems mapping, complex systems, critical systems, infrastructure resilience, AI governance, cyber risk, climate risk, supply-chain risk, finance-readiness, insurance-readiness, public-safe reporting, and cross-sector advisory work.

Help Define the Future of Risk Systems Work

Nexus Agency is building a global opportunity platform for modern risk work. It connects candidates, independent experts, analysts, researchers, advisors, consultants, systems specialists, public-good institutions, consortia, agencies, firms, and project owners across systemic risk, resilience, risk systems, finance-readiness, insurance-readiness, public-safe reporting, public-good governance, and cross-sector advisory work.

This reserve pool is for professionals who can analyze risk as a system rather than as a single event, hazard, asset, dataset, or department. Risk Systems Analysts may support future work involving systems mapping, systemic risk interpretation, human-machine-nature interactions, critical systems, infrastructure dependencies, institutional risk systems, AI and cyber systems, climate and disaster systems, supply-chain systems, public authority learning, finance-readiness questions, insurance-readiness questions, and decision-use materials.

Risk systems work in this listing refers to disciplined, evidence-aware, public-safe analysis of systems, relationships, dependencies, feedback loops, exposure pathways, governance boundaries, uncertainty, safeguards, and decision-use limits. It does not create engineering approval, system certification, operational control, public authority approval, procurement direction, financeability, insurability, investment advice, underwriting judgment, public warning authority, emergency command, technical validation, or execution authority.

Why Join This Reserve Pool

By joining this reserve pool, applicants may become discoverable for future opportunities across risk systems analysis, systemic risk management, systems mapping, risk architecture interpretation, infrastructure and technology risk analysis, public-safe reporting, advisory support, expert panels, working groups, national and regional pathways, partner projects, platform stewardship, independent expert listings, and project-based mandates.

This reserve pool is designed for professionals who want to be visible in a structured global risk marketplace without being limited to one institution, one system type, one hazard, one sector, one geography, one advisory pathway, or one conventional risk-management function.

Opportunity Type

Ongoing Reserve Pool / Expression of Interest.

Location

Global, remote, regional, national, hybrid, field-based, or project-specific, depending on future opportunities and applicable engagement terms.

Engagement Type

Future employment, contract assignment, advisory mandate, consulting assignment, fellowship, volunteer contribution, independent expert listing, platform stewardship, working group participation, consortium pathway, national desk support, partner opportunity, or project-based engagement as separately agreed.

Compensation and Pay Transparency

Compensation is not guaranteed by reserve-pool submission. Any compensation, stipend, consulting fee, advisory rate, contract value, employment salary, honorarium, or project fee will be stated in separate role, mandate, booking, or engagement terms if a specific opportunity becomes active.

Where a specific paid role becomes active in a jurisdiction with pay-transparency, salary-disclosure, or employment-disclosure requirements, the applicable compensation range, pay basis, employment status, location requirements, eligibility requirements, and legally required disclosures should be provided in the relevant active posting or before the required stage of the selection process.

Applicants should not provide salary history as part of this reserve-pool submission. If compensation-related information is required for a specific active role, it should be requested only through a lawful and role-specific process.

About Nexus Agency

Nexus Agency is the Nexus Ecosystem platform for jobs, reserve pools, expert listings, advisory opportunities, project pathways, partner-posted opportunities, and professional matching across modern risk work.

Through Nexus Agency, professionals may upload resumes, join reserve pools, list expertise, apply for opportunities, become discoverable for future roles, and indicate interest in independent expert pathways. Employers, partners, and project owners may use the platform to post jobs, publish projects, request experts, identify advisory support, and connect with relevant talent.

Nexus Agency connects to a wider institutional architecture that includes The Global Centre for Risk and Innovation, The Global Risks Forum, The Global Risks Alliance, and the wider Nexus architecture for technical trust, public legitimacy, and finance-readiness.

Role Overview

The Risk Systems Analyst reserve pool is designed to identify professionals who may support future work involving risk systems analysis, systemic risk interpretation, systems mapping, systems thinking, risk architecture, risk governance, critical systems, infrastructure resilience, AI systems risk, cyber-physical risk, climate systems risk, supply-chain systems risk, public-sector risk systems, public authority learning, public-safe reporting, finance-readiness, and insurance-readiness.

This role is especially relevant to professionals who understand the operating discipline behind Nexus Risk Management, Systemic Risks, the Nexus technical architecture for frontier technologies, systems, providers, protocols, and programmatic resilience infrastructure, the Nexus Observatory, and Public-Safe Technical Reporting. Risk systems analysis must help institutions understand how systems behave, interact, fail, adapt, and transmit stress without turning analysis into engineering approval, official warning, system certification, procurement preference, finance approval, insurance approval, or execution authority.

Risk Systems Analysts may help prepare systems-risk briefs, systems maps, risk architecture notes, dependency and feedback-loop summaries, critical-systems profiles, observatory interpretation notes, public-safe summaries, scenario interpretation products, public authority learning materials, and decision-support products where traceability, uncertainty, public meaning, role boundaries, and correction pathways matter.

Candidates may be considered for future opportunities across Nexus Agency, The Global Centre for Risk and Innovation, The Global Risks Forum, The Global Risks Alliance, Nexus platforms, national and regional consortia, expert communities, partner programs, public-good projects, public-sector learning pathways, private-sector readiness pathways, and independent expert pathways.

This is not a single immediate vacancy. It is an ongoing reserve-pool listing designed to help Nexus Agency identify, classify, and contact relevant talent when future opportunities become active.

Why This Role Matters

Risk systems work matters because modern risk rarely stays inside one boundary. A digital identity system can affect access to public services, fraud exposure, financial inclusion, cybersecurity, privacy, trust, and operational continuity. An energy system can affect water, hospitals, telecom, logistics, food systems, public finance, and community safety. An AI system can affect procurement, accountability, workforce exposure, model governance, cyber risk, data quality, public legitimacy, and insurance relevance at the same time.

The Risk Systems Analyst works at the point where systems need to be made readable without being simplified into false certainty. The role helps clarify what the system is, what it depends on, what it affects, where feedback loops may exist, what assumptions are being made, what evidence supports the analysis, what remains uncertain, and what should not be inferred from a map, model, dashboard, scenario, or technical record.

Systems language can easily be misused. A systems map can be mistaken for a complete model. A simulation can be treated as prediction. A dashboard can be misread as official truth. A technical architecture note can be inflated into certification. A public authority learning discussion can be misrepresented as approval. A finance-readiness note can be mistaken for investment advice. An insurance-readiness note can be mistaken for underwriting. Risk Systems Analysts help protect the record by making systems analysis evidence-aware, source-conscious, uncertainty-literate, and public-safe.

Candidate Profile

This reserve pool may be suitable for experienced risk systems analysts, systemic risk analysts, systems thinkers, systems mapping specialists, risk architecture analysts, critical systems analysts, infrastructure resilience analysts, cyber-physical systems analysts, AI governance analysts, public-sector risk analysts, operational resilience specialists, supply-chain risk analysts, climate risk analysts, disaster risk analysts, public-safe reporting specialists, advisors, consultants, fellows, and practitioners with backgrounds in risk management, systems thinking, public administration, public policy, infrastructure systems, technology governance, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence governance, climate adaptation, disaster risk reduction, supply-chain resilience, public health systems, energy systems, water systems, food systems, finance-readiness, insurance-readiness, geospatial analysis, scenario planning, civil society, or advisory work.

Applicants do not need to match every area listed. This reserve pool is designed to identify capability across several levels of expertise, regions, sectors, disciplines, languages, and future opportunity types.

This pool is designed primarily for mid-level, senior, principal, expert, advisor, fellow, analyst, specialist, and consulting-level professionals. Strong early-career candidates may also be considered where they can demonstrate relevant analytical, research, writing, systems, policy, technical, regional, language, or field capability.

Requirements and Professional Signals

Strong candidates may demonstrate one or more of the following:

  1. experience in risk systems analysis, systemic risk, systems mapping, systems thinking, risk architecture, infrastructure resilience, public-sector risk, technology risk, climate risk, cyber risk, operational resilience, or advisory work;
  2. ability to synthesize complex systems information across sectors, jurisdictions, disciplines, stakeholder groups, institutional settings, and evidence sources;
  3. understanding of systems, dependencies, feedback loops, cascading risk, compound risk, adaptive capacity, critical services, uncertainty, resilience, and public-safe communication;
  4. experience preparing systems maps, systems-risk briefs, risk architecture notes, dependency summaries, critical-systems profiles, public-safe summaries, dashboard interpretation notes, evidence reviews, or decision-support materials;
  5. familiarity with lawful open-source, public-source, partner-provided, observatory, dashboard, indicator, geospatial, scenario, technical, policy, operational, governance, or institutional evidence sources;
  6. ability to distinguish systems analysis, evidence, model output, scenario, assumption, readiness, technical architecture, official decision, public authority status, certification, and public-safe communication;
  7. experience with systems mapping, network thinking, dependency mapping, assumptions mapping, scenario interpretation, model-output review, risk registers, uncertainty framing, or decision-support workflows;
  8. ability to identify unsupported systems claims, false precision, false completeness, source weakness, public authority confusion, public-warning risk, procurement drift, finance overclaim, insurance overclaim, or systems-readiness overstatement;
  9. stakeholder-facing communication experience with public authorities, infrastructure operators, technical teams, executives, civil society, insurers, investors, researchers, universities, donors, system owners, or cross-sector groups;
  10. finance-readiness and insurance-readiness literacy, public finance familiarity, resilience finance awareness, protection-gap awareness, disaster risk finance awareness, or capital-readability awareness;
  11. ability to work across cultures, jurisdictions, institutions, sectors, disciplines, time zones, and language contexts while respecting confidentiality, data sensitivity, source sensitivity, public authority boundaries, community safeguards, Indigenous safeguards where applicable, and role limits.

Potential Areas of Future Work

Risk Systems Analysts may be considered for future opportunities involving:

  • risk systems analysis and systemic risk interpretation;
  • systems mapping, risk architecture mapping, dependency mapping, and feedback-loop interpretation;
  • human-machine-nature nexus analysis involving organizations, institutions, AI systems, digital infrastructure, climate systems, ecosystems, public services, and communities;
  • critical systems analysis involving energy, water, food, health, biodiversity, telecom, transport, housing, finance, insurance, and public systems;
  • AI systems risk, model governance, automation risk, digital infrastructure risk, cyber-physical risk, data governance, and platform risk analysis;
  • climate systems, disaster systems, infrastructure systems, supply-chain systems, public health systems, and public-sector risk systems analysis;
  • systems-risk interpretation for Public Authority Interfaces where government, regulatory, public finance, emergency-management, or public-sector participation must remain bounded;
  • dashboard, observatory, indicator, geospatial, scenario, simulation, and model-output interpretation;
  • evidence synthesis, source review, uncertainty framing, confidence language, correction pathways, and systems-claim review;
  • public-safe systems reporting and public-facing language review connected to Nexus Claims Discipline;
  • finance-readiness and capital-readability language support under GRA’s finance-readiness and insurance-readiness role;
  • insurance-readiness, protection-gap mapping, risk-transfer question mapping, disaster risk finance literacy, and resilience finance literacy support;
  • public-safe finance communication aligned with the Public-Safe Finance Reporting Standard;
  • all-hazards and whole-of-system finance and insurance literacy aligned with GRA’s all-hazards paradigm for financial services risk management;
  • national and regional systems-risk materials, national desk support, consortium pathway support, and partner project support;
  • training, workshops, systems-mapping clinics, risk interpretation sessions, public-safe reporting sessions, and expert-panel support;
  • platform, observatory, registry, report, knowledge-base, or publication content pathways;
  • multilingual adaptation, terminology alignment, taxonomy support, and cross-cultural systems-risk communication where relevant.

Potential Responsibilities

Depending on the future opportunity, a Risk Systems Analyst may support:

  • preparation of systems-risk briefs, risk architecture notes, systems maps, dependency summaries, public-safe summaries, executive briefings, and decision-use products;
  • synthesis of evidence from authorized, open, public, partner-provided, observatory, dashboard, geospatial, technical, policy, operational, governance, finance-readiness, insurance-readiness, or institutional sources;
  • mapping of systems, subsystems, interfaces, dependencies, feedback loops, exposed nodes, vulnerable pathways, assumptions, uncertainties, source limitations, confidence levels, and decision-use boundaries;
  • interpretation of dashboards, observatory outputs, risk registers, scenarios, AI-assisted outputs, cyber exercise records, simulations, public reports, technical architectures, evidence records, and systems documentation;
  • review of systems-related claims, public-facing language, authority language, technical-readiness language, finance-readiness language, insurance-readiness language, public-warning language, and procurement-risk language;
  • development of audience-specific systems-risk products for executives, analysts, public-sector participants, private-sector participants, insurers, investors, researchers, civil society, and partner organizations;
  • support for working groups, expert panels, readiness rooms, learning rooms, national desks, regional consortia, platform teams, and partner projects;
  • documentation of evidence status, source handling limits, uncertainty, assumptions, caveats, public-safe language, correction needs, systems-readiness limits, and role boundaries;
  • coordination with researchers, technical contributors, policy teams, public-safe reporting teams, legal or compliance reviewers where separately engaged, finance-readiness participants, insurance-readiness participants, and institutional stakeholders;
  • contribution to research, advisory, consulting, platform, fellowship, risk systems analysis, publication, or project-based pathways.

Potential Pathways

Applicants may be considered for one or more future pathways, including:

  • employment roles where separately posted and funded;
  • contract assignments;
  • advisory mandates;
  • consulting opportunities;
  • independent expert listings;
  • expert panels;
  • research and evidence projects;
  • public-safe reporting support;
  • national desk support;
  • regional consortium support;
  • working group participation;
  • platform stewardship;
  • fellowships or learning-linked roles;
  • partner-posted opportunities;
  • client-requested expert matching;
  • project-based support.

Independent Expert Option

Applicants who operate as independent experts, risk systems analysts, systemic risk analysts, systems mapping specialists, risk architecture analysts, critical systems analysts, infrastructure resilience specialists, technology risk specialists, public-sector risk analysts, public-safe reporting specialists, advisors, consultants, trainers, facilitators, or specialist practitioners may indicate interest in being listed through Nexus Agency as independent experts.

Independent experts may, where platform features and terms permit, publish expertise, service categories, rates, availability, booking options, jurisdictional scope, language capability, and advisory preferences. Independent experts remain responsible for their own services, rates, taxes, professional obligations, insurance, licenses where applicable, and client relationships unless a separate written agreement provides otherwise.

Listing as an independent expert does not make a person an employee, officer, representative, legal agent, partner, fiduciary, certified provider, endorsed consultant, systems certifier, engineering approver, technical validator, public authority representative, public-warning actor, procurement advisor, finance-readiness approver, insurance-readiness approver, or authorized spokesperson of The Global Centre for Risk and Innovation, The Global Risks Forum, The Global Risks Alliance, Nexus Agency, Nexus, or any consortium entity.

Agency, Firm, and Partner Option

Organizations, advisory firms, research groups, consulting firms, systems teams, infrastructure teams, technology teams, risk management teams, governance teams, public policy teams, resilience teams, technical service organizations, nonprofit partners, academic centers, and professional service teams may express interest in future partner, project, advisory, consulting, training, or service-listing pathways.

Organization participation, listing, or project matching does not imply endorsement, certification, procurement approval, preferred-provider status, public authority approval, systems validation, engineering approval, technical approval, financeability, insurability, public warning authority, operational authority, or Nexus affiliation beyond the recorded platform relationship.

Fair Opportunity and Review

Nexus Agency encourages fair, lawful, and non-discriminatory opportunity practices. Applicants should be assessed based on role-relevant experience, skills, qualifications, availability, jurisdictional fit, language capability, professional conduct, work samples, evidence of capability, and suitability for future opportunities.

Where a specific active role, project, mandate, or partner opportunity becomes available, additional eligibility criteria may apply, including location, right to work, language, professional license, security, safeguarding, data-handling, confidentiality, conflict disclosure, insurance, or client-specific requirements.

Applicant Data and Privacy

Applicants may be asked to submit professional and contact information, resumes, biographies, work samples, publications, portfolios, availability, jurisdictional preferences, language capability, conflict disclosures, and other role-relevant information. Applicants should review the applicable platform privacy policy before submitting materials.

Applicant information should be handled according to applicable privacy, data protection, platform, and consent requirements. Applicants should not submit confidential, classified, restricted, proprietary, sensitive personal, client-owned, government-controlled, law-enforcement-sensitive, emergency-response-sensitive, infrastructure-sensitive, cyber-sensitive, systems-sensitive, financial-sensitive, public-finance-sensitive, public-records-restricted, public-agency-controlled, Indigenous knowledge, community-protected, or third-party information unless the platform or a specific engagement expressly provides an appropriate submission pathway and authorization.

What This Listing Does Not Create

This listing does not create employment, appointment, compensation entitlement, expert standing, certification, endorsement, procurement status, preferred-provider status, public authority status, government representative status, systems validation, technical certification, engineering approval, operational approval, project approval, investment approval, investment advice, finance-readiness approval, insurance-readiness approval, underwriting acceptance, public finance approval, regulatory approval, legal authority, financeability, insurability, community consent, Indigenous consent where applicable, authority to represent any Nexus-related institution, or any guarantee of future contact, interview, selection, matching, booking, or engagement.

It also does not authorize applicants to provide regulated legal, financial, insurance, medical, engineering, public authority, procurement, emergency management, law-enforcement, intelligence, security, public-warning, investment, underwriting, regulatory, lobbying, public finance, investigative, classified, restricted, technical certification, systems operation, infrastructure operation, or other regulated professional services unless they are separately authorized to do so under applicable law and a separate written engagement.

For clarity, systems-risk work should be read within GCRI’s clear institutional boundaries, and finance-readiness and insurance-readiness language in this listing should be read within GRA boundary discipline. This listing does not imply investment advice, underwriting, insurance placement, rating, certification, capital raising, transaction support, financial approval, insurance approval, public finance approval, market signal, bankability, project approval, systems approval, Nexus approval, public authority support, disaster funding approval, preparedness approval, or transaction readiness.

Reserve Pool Notice

This is an ongoing reserve-pool and expression-of-interest listing. Candidates may be contacted if their profile aligns with a future role, project, advisory mandate, fellowship, platform need, working group, national desk, consortium pathway, independent expert opportunity, or partner opportunity.

Any engagement will require separate written terms.

Suggested Application Materials

Applicants may be asked to provide:

  • resume or CV;
  • short professional biography;
  • areas of expertise;
  • preferred regions or jurisdictions;
  • languages;
  • engagement preferences;
  • availability;
  • work sample, writing sample, publication, portfolio, systems-risk brief, systems map, risk architecture note, dependency map, critical-systems profile, evidence review sample, dashboard interpretation note, public-safe summary, scenario interpretation sample, source review sample, or project summary where relevant;
  • independent expert interest, where applicable;
  • agency, firm, or organization interest, where applicable;
  • conflict disclosures, where relevant;
  • acknowledgement of reserve-pool and no-guarantee terms.

Apply

Submit your profile to join the Risk Systems Analyst reserve pool and become discoverable for future opportunities across risk systems analysis, systemic risk, systems mapping, complex systems, critical systems, infrastructure resilience, AI governance, cyber risk, climate risk, supply-chain risk, finance-readiness, insurance-readiness, public-safe reporting, national capacity, and systems transformation pathways.

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