inadequades
Inadequades is a term used in discussions of design, policy, and systems analysis to denote clusters of failures that prevent a project, system, or artifact from fulfilling its intended function or value. Rather than a single defect, an inadequade is understood as the outcome of interacting factors—technical constraints, organizational practices, economic incentives, and social expectations—that jointly produce a pattern of shortfalls across multiple dimensions, such as performance, accessibility, and equity.
Etymology and usage: The term is a neologism formed from inadequate with the plural suffix -ades. It
Applications and examples: In urban planning, inadequades might appear as a transit project that underperforms because
Causes and indicators: Common sources include fragmented governance, incomplete data, conflicting incentives, and bias in design
Critique and reception: Some scholars argue the term is vague or too broad, while proponents find it