Simulating institutional heterogeneity in sustainability science

Author:

Davidson Michael R.12ORCID,Filatova Tatiana3ORCID,Peng Wei45ORCID,Verbeek Liz3ORCID,Kucuksayacigil Fikri1

Affiliation:

1. School of Global Policy and Strategy, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093

2. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093

3. Department of Multi Actor Systems, Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management, Delft University of Technology, 2628 BX Delft, The Netherlands

4. School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544

5. Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544

Abstract

Sustainability outcomes are influenced by the laws and configurations of natural and engineered systems as well as activities in socio-economic systems. An important subset of human activity is the creation and implementation of institutions, formal and informal rules shaping a wide range of human behavior. Understanding these rules and codifying them in computational models can provide important missing insights into why systems function the way they do (static) as well as the pace and structure of transitions required to improve sustainability (dynamic). Here, we conduct a comparative synthesis of three modeling approaches— integrated assessment modeling, engineering–economic optimization, and agent-based modeling—with underexplored potential to represent institutions. We first perform modeling experiments on climate mitigation systems that represent specific aspects of heterogeneous institutions, including formal policies and institutional coordination, and informal attitudes and norms. We find measurable but uneven aggregate impacts, while more politically meaningful distributional impacts are large across various actors. Our results show that omitting institutions can influence the costs of climate mitigation and miss opportunities to leverage institutional forces to speed up emissions reduction. These experiments allow us to explore the capacity of each modeling approach to represent insitutions and to lay out a vision for the next frontier of endogenizing institutional change in sustainability science models. To bridge the gap between modeling, theories, and empirical evidence on social institutions, this research agenda calls for joint efforts between sustainability modelers who wish to explore and incorporate institutional detail, and social scientists studying the socio-political and economic foundations for sustainability transitions.

Funder

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

EC | European Research Council

Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Reference89 articles.

1. Sustainability Science: Toward a Synthesis

2. Ontologies, socio-technical transitions (to sustainability), and the multi-level perspective

3. Skea J. , Climate Change 2022: Mitigation of Climate Change: Contribution of Working Group III to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2022).

4. NASEM, Next Generation Earth Systems Science at the National Science Foundation (National Academies of Sciences. Engineering, and Medicine, 2021).

5. A review of agent‐based modeling of climate‐energy policy

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