4.6 Article

Systemic Risk: The Threat to Societal Diversity and Coherence

Journal

RISK ANALYSIS
Volume 42, Issue 9, Pages 1921-1934

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/risa.13654

Keywords

Applying insights from complexity research to sociopolitical questions; cohesion; integration; migration; patterns of societal orders

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Insights from complexity science can be applied to analyze social processes, including the structure of social risks. The contribution of self-organization, often underestimated in social science theories, plays a crucial role in the crises facing modern democracy.
Insights from complexity science can be applied to the analysis of social processes in heterogeneous societies. Many features that characterize and influence complex structures in nearly every domain of nature, technology, and society can be derived from simple modeling processes in physics and chemistry. If one applies these features to the structure of social risks, a number of insights are gained that can be subject to further empirical analysis. In particular, they add-to the well-known steering mechanisms of hierarchy, competition, and cooperation-the contribution of self-organization, the effect of which is underestimated in almost all theories of social science. But in view of the crises facing modern democracy, such as migration and populism, it is precisely this mechanism of dynamic structure generation that is decisive for an effective and fair risk governance. In this article, we analyze the threat to societal diversity and coherence on the basis of complexity science.

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