Navigating polycrisis: long-run socio-cultural factors shape response to changing climate

Author:

Hoyer Daniel12ORCID,Bennett James S.13ORCID,Reddish Jenny1,Holder Samantha2,Howard Robert2,Benam Majid1,Levine Jill2,Ludlow Francis4,Feinman Gary5,Turchin Peter1

Affiliation:

1. Complexity Science Hub, 1080 Vienna, Austria

2. Evolution Institute, San Antonio, FL 33576, USA

3. University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA

4. Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, D02 PN40, Ireland

5. Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL 60605, USA

Abstract

Climate variability and natural hazards like floods and earthquakes can act as environmental shocks or socioecological stressors leading to instability and suffering throughout human history. Yet, societies experience a wide range of outcomes when facing such challenges: some suffer from social unrest, civil violence or complete collapse; others prove more resilient and maintain key social functions. We currently lack a clear, generally agreed-upon conceptual framework and evidentiary base to explore what causes these divergent outcomes. Here, we discuss efforts to develop such a framework through the Crisis Database (CrisisDB) programme. We illustrate that the impact of environmental stressors is mediated through extant cultural, political and economic structures that evolve over extended timescales (decades to centuries). These structures can generate high resilience to major shocks, facilitate positive adaptation, or, alternatively, undermine collective action and lead to unrest, violence and even societal collapse. By exposing the ways that different societies have reacted to crises over their lifetime, this framework can help identify the factors and complex social–ecological interactions that either bolster or undermine resilience to contemporary climate shocks. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Climate change adaptation needs a science of culture’.

Funder

IRC Laureate Award

US Army Research Office

Österreichische Forschungsförderungsgesellschaft

European Research Council Synergy Grant

V. Kann Rasmussen Foundation

Institute of Economics and Peace

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference56 articles.

1. Lawrence M Janzwood S Homer-Dixon T. 2022 What is a global polycrisis? Cascade Institute Discussion Paper; 2022–4:11. See https://cascade institute.org.

2. Role of climate in the rise and fall of the Neo-Assyrian Empire

3. Megadrought and Collapse

4. Climate and the Collapse of Maya Civilization

5. Diamond J. 2005 Collapse: how societies choose to succeed or fail. New York, NY: Viking Penguin.

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