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Updated: Oct 10, 2025

Watershed Planning within a Quantitative Scenario Analysis Framework
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A systems framework for remedying dysfunction in US democracy.

Samuel S-H Wang1, Jonathan Cervas2, Bernard Grofman3

  • 1Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544; sswang@princeton.edu.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
|December 8, 2021
PubMed
Summary

Systems-level modeling can reveal how electoral institutions exacerbate democratic failures like polarization. This approach helps design effective, lasting reforms for US democracy by understanding complex political dynamics.

Keywords:
complex systemsdemocracypolitical polarizationreformrepresentation

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Area of Science:

  • Political Science
  • Systems Engineering
  • Computational Social Science

Background:

  • Democracy faces challenges meeting ideals due to electoral institutions.
  • Undesirable outcomes include elite polarization, unresponsiveness, and factional power.
  • Predicting reform effectiveness is difficult due to complex interactions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Outline a path for systems-level modeling to understand and optimize US democracy repairs.
  • Analyze emergent phenomena like polarization and antimajoritarianism.
  • Provide a theoretical framework for evaluating democratic reforms.

Main Methods:

  • Employing systems-level modeling inspired by engineering and biology.
  • Incorporating dynamical properties like nonlinearities, feedback loops, and integration over time.
  • Analyzing specific phenomena: low dimensionality, elite polarization, and legislative antimajoritarianism.

Main Results:

  • Demonstrated how long-standing rules contribute to undesirable outcomes in changing political environments.
  • Illustrated the application of systems modeling to analyze democratic phenomena.
  • Showcased the potential for theoretical understanding to guide reform evaluation.

Conclusions:

  • Rigorous systems-level modeling is crucial for understanding and repairing democratic deficits.
  • This approach can predict the effectiveness and durability of proposed reforms.
  • Modeling offers a path to designing lasting, effective solutions for US democracy.