Landscape of fear: indirect effects of conflict can account for large-scale population declines in non-state societies.

IF 3.7 2区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES Journal of The Royal Society Interface Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-28 DOI:10.1098/rsif.2024.0210
Dániel Kondor, James S Bennett, Detlef Gronenborn, Peter Turchin
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Abstract

The impact of inter-group conflict on population dynamics has long been debated, especially for prehistoric and non-state societies. In this work, we consider that beyond direct battle casualties, conflicts can also create a 'landscape of fear' in which many non-combatants near theatres of conflict abandon their homes and migrate away. This process causes population decline in the abandoned regions and increased stress on local resources in better-protected areas that are targeted by refugees. By applying analytical and computational modelling, we demonstrate that these indirect effects of conflict are sufficient to produce substantial, long-term population boom-and-bust patterns in non-state societies, such as the case of Mid-Holocene Europe. We also demonstrate that greater availability of defensible locations act to protect and maintain the supply of combatants, increasing the permanence of the landscape of fear and the likelihood of endemic warfare.

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恐惧景观:冲突的间接影响可能是非国家社会人口大规模减少的原因。
长期以来,人们一直在讨论群体间冲突对人口动态的影响,尤其是对史前和非国家社会的影响。在这项研究中,我们认为除了直接的战斗伤亡外,冲突还可能造成 "恐惧景观",冲突地区附近的许多非战斗人员会放弃家园并迁移到其他地方。这一过程会导致被遗弃地区的人口减少,并增加难民所针对的保护较好地区的当地资源压力。通过应用分析和计算模型,我们证明了冲突的这些间接影响足以在非国家社会中产生大量长期的人口繁荣和衰退模式,例如全新世中期的欧洲。我们还证明,更多的可防御地点可以保护和维持战斗人员的供应,增加恐惧景观的持久性和地方性战争的可能性。
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来源期刊
Journal of The Royal Society Interface
Journal of The Royal Society Interface 综合性期刊-综合性期刊
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
2.60%
发文量
234
审稿时长
2.5 months
期刊介绍: J. R. Soc. Interface welcomes articles of high quality research at the interface of the physical and life sciences. It provides a high-quality forum to publish rapidly and interact across this boundary in two main ways: J. R. Soc. Interface publishes research applying chemistry, engineering, materials science, mathematics and physics to the biological and medical sciences; it also highlights discoveries in the life sciences of relevance to the physical sciences. Both sides of the interface are considered equally and it is one of the only journals to cover this exciting new territory. J. R. Soc. Interface welcomes contributions on a diverse range of topics, including but not limited to; biocomplexity, bioengineering, bioinformatics, biomaterials, biomechanics, bionanoscience, biophysics, chemical biology, computer science (as applied to the life sciences), medical physics, synthetic biology, systems biology, theoretical biology and tissue engineering.
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