The world is not facing a series of separate crises.It is facing the consequences of how its systems interact.Climate instability, artificial intelligence, financial fragility, geopolitical conflict, social fragmentation and institutional failure are not isolated problems. They are systemic outcomes of a civilisation that has become highly intelligent, deeply interconnected - and yet fundamentally fragmented in how it understands itself.The Global Systems Handbook by Manoj Dembla offers a radically different way of seeing the world.Rather than analysing individual domains, this book maps the deep structures that shape global reality: economic systems, capital flows, technological architectures, governance frameworks, cultural narratives and human cognition. It shows how their interactions produce the patterns we experience as risk, uncertainty and crisis.This is not a book of predictions.It is not a book of solutions.It is a book about perception.Through five integrated frameworks - Reality, Risk, Transition, Leadership and Future - the handbook reveals why modern civilisation does not lack intelligence, data or expertise, but lacks systemic awareness. Why leaders manage symptoms instead of redesigning structures. Why progress generates unintended consequences. And why the greatest risks facing humanity are not technological or economic, but cognitive.Written for global leaders, policymakers, thinkers, investors and decision-makers, The Global Systems Handbook is a strategic reference work for anyone seeking to understand how the world actually operates as a system - and what kind of future is structurally emerging from it.This book does not seek to change what you think about the world.It seeks to change how you see it.Because once reality is perceived as a system, every decision becomes part of something larger than itself.