A Dynamic Network Model of Societal Complexity and Resilience Inspired by Tainter’s Theory of Collapse

Author:

Schunck Florian12ORCID,Wiedermann Marc3ORCID,Heitzig Jobst3ORCID,Donges Jonathan F.34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Group System Ecotox, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research GmbH—UFZ, Permoserstraße 15, 04318 Leipzig, Germany

2. Research Group System Science, Institute of Mathematics, Osnabrück University, Barbarastraße 12, 49076 Osnabrück, Germany

3. FutureLab on Game Theory and Networks of Interacting Agents, FutureLab on Earth Resilience in the Anthropocene, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, P.O. Box 601203, 14412 Potsdam, Germany

4. Stockholm Resilience Centre, Stockholm University, Albanovägen 28, 106 91 Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

In recent years, several global events have severely disrupted economies and social structures, undermining confidence in the resilience of modern societies. Examples include the COVID-19 pandemic, which brought unprecedented health challenges and economic disruptions, and the emergence of geopolitical tensions and conflicts that have further strained international relations and economic stability. While empirical evidence on the dynamics and drivers of past societal collapse is mounting, a process-based understanding of these dynamics is still in its infancy. Here, we aim to identify and illustrate the underlying drivers of such societal instability or even collapse. The inspiration for this work is Joseph Tainter’s theory of the “collapse of complex societies”, which postulates that the complexity of societies increases as they solve problems, leading to diminishing returns on complexity investments and ultimately to collapse. In this work, we abstract this theory into a low-dimensional and stylized model of two classes of networked agents, hereafter referred to as “laborers” and “administrators”. We numerically model the dynamics of societal complexity, measured as the fraction of “administrators”, which was assumed to affect the productivity of connected energy-producing “laborers”. We show that collapse becomes increasingly likely as the complexity of the model society continuously increases in response to external stresses that emulate Tainter’s abstract notion of problems that societies must solve. We also provide an analytical approximation of the system’s dominant dynamics, which matches well with the numerical experiments, and use it to study the influence on network link density, social mobility and productivity. Our work advances the understanding of social-ecological collapse and illustrates its potentially direct link to an ever-increasing societal complexity in response to external shocks or stresses via a self-reinforcing feedback.

Funder

Leibniz Association

European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme

German National Academic Foundation

German Federal Ministry for Education and Research

European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), the BMBF and the Land Brandenburg

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy

Reference63 articles.

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