If the United States survives Trump, there is a genuine possibility of reconstruction, but only because damage exposes the relationships that mattered and brings hidden dependencies into the open, revealing how the system was actually held together. The damage being inflicted is real and severe, economic and political at once. Disruption to institutions, markets, and […]
- Tags adaptive governance, applied systems theory, authoritarian governance, authority and force, cognitive diversity, collective intelligence, complex adaptive systems, complexity and democracy, complexity theory, coordination without central command, cybernetic governance, cybernetics, decentralised coordination, democratic resilience, distributed intelligence, economic reconstruction, emergence, feedback loops, field logic, governance systems, holism, institutional collapse, institutional rebuilding, learning systems, legitimacy and power, non-linear dynamics, performative governance, phase delay, policy failure, political cybernetics, political economy, political systems analysis, post-crisis reconstruction, reconstruction politics, resilience theory, second-order cybernetics, signal and noise, social cohesion, spectacle politics, system failure modes, systems collapse, systems learning, systems resilience, systems theory, Trump, Trump politics, Trump presidency, worker-centered reconstruction