Early Warning Signals of Social Transformation: A Case Study from the US Southwest.

Recent research in ecology suggests that generic indicators, referred to as early warning signals (EWS), may occur before significant transformations, both critical and non-critical, in complex systems. Up to this point, research on EWS has largely focused on simple models and controlled experiments...

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Main Authors: Katherine A Spielmann, Matthew A Peeples, Donna M Glowacki, Andrew Dugmore
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5051805?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-930dcfc7dfe94dac9cf6b8bb8afd7f142020-11-24T20:41:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-011110e016368510.1371/journal.pone.0163685Early Warning Signals of Social Transformation: A Case Study from the US Southwest.Katherine A SpielmannMatthew A PeeplesDonna M GlowackiAndrew DugmoreRecent research in ecology suggests that generic indicators, referred to as early warning signals (EWS), may occur before significant transformations, both critical and non-critical, in complex systems. Up to this point, research on EWS has largely focused on simple models and controlled experiments in ecology and climate science. When humans are considered in these arenas they are invariably seen as external sources of disturbance or management. In this article we explore ways to include societal components of socio-ecological systems directly in EWS analysis. Given the growing archaeological literature on 'collapses,' or transformations, in social systems, we investigate whether any early warning signals are apparent in the archaeological records of the build-up to two contemporaneous cases of social transformation in the prehistoric US Southwest, Mesa Verde and Zuni. The social transformations in these two cases differ in scope and severity, thus allowing us to explore the contexts under which warning signals may (or may not) emerge. In both cases our results show increasing variance in settlement size before the transformation, but increasing variance in social institutions only before the critical transformation in Mesa Verde. In the Zuni case, social institutions appear to have managed the process of significant social change. We conclude that variance is of broad relevance in anticipating social change, and the capacity of social institutions to mitigate transformation is critical to consider in EWS research on socio-ecological systems.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5051805?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katherine A Spielmann
Matthew A Peeples
Donna M Glowacki
Andrew Dugmore
spellingShingle Katherine A Spielmann
Matthew A Peeples
Donna M Glowacki
Andrew Dugmore
Early Warning Signals of Social Transformation: A Case Study from the US Southwest.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Katherine A Spielmann
Matthew A Peeples
Donna M Glowacki
Andrew Dugmore
author_sort Katherine A Spielmann
title Early Warning Signals of Social Transformation: A Case Study from the US Southwest.
title_short Early Warning Signals of Social Transformation: A Case Study from the US Southwest.
title_full Early Warning Signals of Social Transformation: A Case Study from the US Southwest.
title_fullStr Early Warning Signals of Social Transformation: A Case Study from the US Southwest.
title_full_unstemmed Early Warning Signals of Social Transformation: A Case Study from the US Southwest.
title_sort early warning signals of social transformation: a case study from the us southwest.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Recent research in ecology suggests that generic indicators, referred to as early warning signals (EWS), may occur before significant transformations, both critical and non-critical, in complex systems. Up to this point, research on EWS has largely focused on simple models and controlled experiments in ecology and climate science. When humans are considered in these arenas they are invariably seen as external sources of disturbance or management. In this article we explore ways to include societal components of socio-ecological systems directly in EWS analysis. Given the growing archaeological literature on 'collapses,' or transformations, in social systems, we investigate whether any early warning signals are apparent in the archaeological records of the build-up to two contemporaneous cases of social transformation in the prehistoric US Southwest, Mesa Verde and Zuni. The social transformations in these two cases differ in scope and severity, thus allowing us to explore the contexts under which warning signals may (or may not) emerge. In both cases our results show increasing variance in settlement size before the transformation, but increasing variance in social institutions only before the critical transformation in Mesa Verde. In the Zuni case, social institutions appear to have managed the process of significant social change. We conclude that variance is of broad relevance in anticipating social change, and the capacity of social institutions to mitigate transformation is critical to consider in EWS research on socio-ecological systems.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5051805?pdf=render
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