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System Archetypes. Sources: Jay Forrester, Donella Meadows, Peter Senge, Dan Kim, William Braun, and others. Forrester’s 1968 List ( Urban Dynamics , Chapter 6: Notes on Complex Systems). Counterintuive behavior Insensitivity to parameter changes Resistance to policy changes
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System Archetypes Sources: Jay Forrester, Donella Meadows, Peter Senge, Dan Kim, William Braun, and others.
Forrester’s 1968 List(Urban Dynamics, Chapter 6: Notes on Complex Systems) • Counterintuive behavior • Insensitivity to parameter changes • Resistance to policy changes • Control through influence points • Corrective programs counteracted by the system • Long-term versus short-term response • Drift to low performance
Dana Meadows’ 1980 List(Whole Earth Models & Systems, Coevolution Quarterly) • Policy resistance • Drift to low performance • Addiction • Official addiction – shifting the burden to the intervener • High leverage, wrong direction
Dana’s Recommendations for Global Policy • Respectful of the system • Responsible for the system’s behavior • Experimental • Attentive to the system as a whole • Attentive to the long term • Comprehensive • No part of the human race is really separate either from other human beings or from the global ecosystem. We all rise or fall together.
Braun’s List • Limits to Growth (aka Limits to Success) • Shifting the Burden • Eroding Goals • Escalation • Success to the Successful • Tragedy of the Commons • Fixes that Fail • Growth and Underinvestment • Accidental Adversaries • Attractiveness Principle
Shifting the burden Examples?
Eroding goals What famous model does this come from?
Tragedy of the commons Not clear one can build a model exhibiting the phenomenon of the Tragedy of the Commons from this structure.
Fixes that fail What are the stocks?
Accidental adversaries I’ve never seen this applied.
Things to observe • Forrester’s list comes directly from simulation-based studies • Meadows’s list is similarly based on empirical experience with formal models • Braun’s list (adapted from Senge and Kim) is distant from formal models. • Some archetypes are easy to model. • Some archetypes are hard to model.
A stock-and-flow archetype(Andersen and Richardson, various interventions)