Are civilizations destined to collapse? Lessons from the Mediterranean Bronze Age

IF 8.6 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Global Environmental Change Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2023.102792
Igor Linkov , S.E. Galaitsi , Benjamin D. Trump , Elizaveta Pinigina , Krista Rand , Eric H. Cline , Maksim Kitsak
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Abstract

As the world faces multiple crises, lessons from humanity’s past can potentially suggest ways to decrease disruptions and increase societal resilience. From 1200 to 1100 BCE, several advanced societies in the Eastern Mediterranean suffered dramatic collapse. Though the causes of the Late Bronze Age Collapse are still debated, contributing factors may include a “perfect storm” of multiple stressors: social and economic upheaval, earthquake clusters, climate change, and others. We examined how collapse might have propagated through the societies’ connections by modeling the Eastern Mediterranean Late Bronze Age trade and socio-political networks. Our model shows that the Late Bronze Age societies made a robust network, where any single node’s collapse was insufficient to catalyze the regional collapse that historically transpired. However, modeled scenarios indicate that some paired node disruptions could cause cascading failure within the network. Subsequently, a holistic understanding of the region’s network incentive structures and feedback loops can help societies anticipate compounding risk conditions that might lead to widespread collapse and allow them to take appropriate actions to mitigate or adapt societal dependencies. Such network analyses may be able to provide insight as to how we can prevent a collapse of socio-political, economic and trade networks similar to what occurred at the end of the Late Bronze Age. Though such data-intensive analytics were unavailable to these Bronze Age regions, modern society may be able to leverage historical lessons in order to foster improved robustness and resilience to compounding threats. Our work shows that civilization collapses are preventable; we are not necessarily destined to collapse.

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文明注定要崩溃吗?地中海青铜时代的教训
在世界面临多重危机之际,人类过去的经验教训有可能为我们提供减少混乱和提高社会复原力的方法。从公元前 1200 年到公元前 1100 年,东地中海的几个先进社会经历了剧烈的崩溃。尽管青铜时代晚期崩溃的原因仍有争议,但促成因素可能包括一场由多种压力因素组成的 "完美风暴":社会和经济动荡、地震群、气候变化等。我们通过模拟东地中海青铜时代晚期的贸易和社会政治网络,研究了崩溃是如何通过社会的联系传播开来的。我们的模型显示,青铜时代晚期的社会构成了一个强大的网络,任何一个节点的崩溃都不足以催化历史上发生的区域性崩溃。然而,模型情景显示,一些成对节点的破坏可能会导致网络内的连锁性崩溃。因此,全面了解该地区的网络激励结构和反馈回路有助于社会预测可能导致大面积崩溃的复合风险条件,并采取适当行动减轻或调整社会依赖性。这种网络分析或许能够为我们提供洞察力,帮助我们防止类似青铜时代晚期社会政治、经济和贸易网络的崩溃。虽然这些青铜时代的地区无法获得这种数据密集型分析方法,但现代社会或许可以利用历史教训来提高对复合威胁的稳健性和复原力。我们的工作表明,文明的崩溃是可以预防的;我们并不一定注定要崩溃。
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来源期刊
Global Environmental Change
Global Environmental Change 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
18.20
自引率
2.20%
发文量
146
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: Global Environmental Change is a prestigious international journal that publishes articles of high quality, both theoretically and empirically rigorous. The journal aims to contribute to the understanding of global environmental change from the perspectives of human and policy dimensions. Specifically, it considers global environmental change as the result of processes occurring at the local level, but with wide-ranging impacts on various spatial, temporal, and socio-political scales. In terms of content, the journal seeks articles with a strong social science component. This includes research that examines the societal drivers and consequences of environmental change, as well as social and policy processes that aim to address these challenges. While the journal covers a broad range of topics, including biodiversity and ecosystem services, climate, coasts, food systems, land use and land cover, oceans, urban areas, and water resources, it also welcomes contributions that investigate the drivers, consequences, and management of other areas affected by environmental change. Overall, Global Environmental Change encourages research that deepens our understanding of the complex interactions between human activities and the environment, with the goal of informing policy and decision-making.
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