Robustness, institutions, and large-scale change in social-ecological systems: the Hohokam of the Phoenix Basin

TitleRobustness, institutions, and large-scale change in social-ecological systems: the Hohokam of the Phoenix Basin
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AuthorsAnderies JM
JournalJournal of institutional economics
Volume2
Issue2
Pagination133-155
Source DocumentAccessible with appropriate permission
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Titlesort ascending
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The Hohokam Cultural Sequence (Irrigation and Foraging), Sonoran Desert, greater Phoenix basin, Arizona, USA

Case
The Hohokam is a Native American cilivilization that emerged and occupied the present day Phoenix Basin area and its outer bounds for a thousand years. The archeological records indicate that the Hohokam society evolved into a complex irrigation society and reached its peak in levels of population, social institutions, and irrigation infrastructure by the 11th century.Perplexingly though, the Hohokam society subsequently declined and collapsed by the mid 14th century. As they declined, the...
09 Aug 2016

Robustness, institutions, and large-scale change in social-ecological systems: the Hohokam of the Phoenix Basin

Model
This is a model that illustrates the relationship among levels of (1) population, (2) human-made capital, (3) natural capital , and (4) resource consumption. The key insight to be gained from the model is that as the ratio of capitalization in human-made infrastructure over human population is varied in the parameter space, the dynamics of natural capital changes and becomes vulnerable to different disturbance regimes. That is, as humans grow in population and over-invest in capitalization/...
09 Aug 2016