Stories tagged with "collapse"
Things Fall Apart: Complexity, Supply Chains, Infrastructure & Collapse
Posted by Rembrandt on August 4, 2009 - 10:18am
Topic: Economics/Finance
Tags: alcatraz conference, collapse, complexity, dynamics, feasta, infrastructure, supply chains [list all tags]
This is a presentation by Dr. David Korowicz from Feasta, given at the Oil Drum/ASPO Conference at Alcatraz, Italy in June 2009. It can be downloaded here: Things fall apart: Some thoughts on complexity, supply chains, infrastructure & collapse dynamics, PDF 23 slides, 1.3 MB, text of spoken presentation.

Excerpts from "Peak Civilization: The Fall of the Roman Empire"
Posted by Ugo Bardi on July 22, 2009 - 10:22am
Topic: Environment/Sustainability
Tags: alcatraz conference, collapse, eroei, roman empire, society, teutoburg [list all tags]
This is an abridged version of a 10,000+ word post which can be read on Oil Drum Europe. We hope many will take the time to read the long version. Hopefully, these excerpts will give the flavor of the full story.--Gail.

A silver mask that had belonged to a Roman cavalryman of imperial times. It was found on the site of the battle of Teutoburg, fought in September 9 a.d. This year, 2009, marks the 2000th anniversary of the battle that led to the annihilation of three Roman legions and changed forever the history of Europe. It was a tremendous shock for the Romans, who saw their mighty army destroyed by uncivilized barbarians. It was not yet the peak of the Roman Empire, but it was a first hint that something was deeply wrong with it.
"Peak Civilization": The Fall of the Roman Empire
Posted by Ugo Bardi on July 22, 2009 - 1:23am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Environment/Sustainability
Tags: alcatraz conference, collapse, eroei, roman empire, society, teutoburg [list all tags]
Tuna, Toilet paper, and Timing
Posted by Nate Hagens on July 12, 2009 - 10:44am in The Oil Drum: Campfire
Topic: Sociology/Psychology
Tags: campfire, collapse, discount rates, hoarding, intergenerational equity, original, toilet paper [list all tags]
Concern about global resource depletion, at least in certain circles, is generating individual hoarding behavior - I don't know how prevalent this is, the potential advantages it will ultimately confer, or any of the subtleties of the'must have' list. This brief Campfire essay is a (somewhat disjointed) exploration of the short term translation of financial capital into basic goods, from the perspective of long term timing and social trajectories. (I expect it will generate some good discussion, especially following Luis' piece on Sustainability)

How Will Knowledge of Collapse Impact Collapse?
Posted by Nate Hagens on June 21, 2009 - 10:00am in The Oil Drum: Campfire
Topic: Environment/Sustainability
Tags: collapse, joseph tainter, noah raford, panarchy [list all tags]
I just watched an excellent and thought provoking lecture by Noah Raford at London School of Economics (hat tip Jason Bradford): (Note: you can play around with these models on Netlogo online HERE)
Collapse Dynamics
The lecture was about various examples in nature, financial markets and civilizations where previously correlated patterns were eventually sharply disrupted by small critical changes leading to phase transitions. We've had essays on the failure of networked systems, the ecological framing of collapse, and similar topics on TOD before, but while watching the 2 video lectures, I started to wonder: what impact does detailed knowledge of collapse dynamics have on collapse dynamics? This is the topic of tonight's Campfire.
On American Sustainability - Anatomy of Societal Collapse (Summary)
Posted by Gail the Actuary on May 13, 2009 - 9:52am
Topic: Environment/Sustainability
Tags: chris clugston, collapse, sustainability [list all tags]
This guest post by Chris Clugston is a high level summary of a detailed analysis of America’s “predicament” and its inevitable consequences that he also prepared. His complete analysis and associated models, evidence, and references can be found at this link.
On American Sustainability—Anatomy of a Societal Collapse (Summary)
The Real “Inconvenient Truth”
Most Americans believe that we are “exceptional”—both as a society and as a species. We believe that America was ordained through divine providence to be the societal role model for the world. And we believe that through our superior intellect, we can harness and even conquer Nature in our continuous quest to improve the material living standards associated with our ever-increasing population.
The truth is that our pioneering predecessors drifted, quite by accident, upon a veritable treasure trove of natural resources and natural habitats, which they wrested by force from the native inhabitants, and which we have persistently overexploited in order to create and perpetuate our American way of life. The truth is that through our “divine ordination” and “superior intellect”, we have been persistently and systematically eliminating the very resources upon which our way of life and our existence depend.
It's the Ecology, Stupid
Posted by Nate Hagens on May 8, 2009 - 10:05am
Topic: Environment/Sustainability
Tags: addiction, collapse, energy, peak oil, regime change, sustainability [list all tags]
My next essay(s) will detail why our current crisis is manifesting in credit/finance, but has origins in and implications for energy, ecology and equity. I thought it would be helpful to first frame this situation from an academic perspective, by highlighting a recent Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences paper: "Overcoming Systemic Roadblocks to Sustainability: The Evolutionary Redesign of Worldviews, Institutions, and Technologies", written by a group of colleagues (professors and students) at the Gund Institute for Ecological Economics at the University of Vermont. It is a long paper but covers issues worthy of discussion - most notably an academic framework for averting collapse - a tall task. What say you? (Note: some of the authors may be reading/responding to comments, but it's finals week.)
Mexico: A Collapse Update
Posted by jeffvail on March 8, 2009 - 11:59am
Topic: Miscellaneous
Tags: cantarell, collapse, drug cartels, mexico, pemex [list all tags]
I’ve been predicting the collapse of the Mexican Nation-State since 2006. It turns out that was a bit premature. But with violence flaring, the potential for collapse in Mexico is once again in the headlines. Oil production continues to fall, border violence is up, and the government is preparing for a showdown with the drug cartels. I’ll argue below that the government will keep the wheels on through 2009, but that the Mexican state will collapse shortly thereafter, ushering in the beginning of the end of the Nation-State.
The Borg: A Financial Allegory
Posted by Gail the Actuary on October 6, 2008 - 10:38am
Topic: Economics/Finance
Tags: bank, banks, collapse, credit, debt, federal reserve, fiat money, finance, financial system, insolvency, jason bradford, monetary system, money, original [list all tags]
This is an allegory explaining some of the monetary issues associated with the current financial crisis. It was written by Jason Bradford. Jason was an academic biologist who "retired" at a young age to become a community organizer and learn how to farm with peak oil in mind. He also hosts a biweekly radio show on public radio called The Reality Report.
I have never been a huge follower of Star Trek, but when thinking about the financial beast thrashing about the Borg comes to mind.

"Strength is irrelevant. Resistance is futile...Your culture will adapt to service ours." -- The Borg.
The Borg is a hive-like hybrid swarm of humanoid species, turned partially robotic. They are distinctly goal oriented towards “assimilation” of all other humanoids and press themselves relentlessly with the creepy mantra “Resistance is futile.”
The money system is eerily Borg-like. Because it structurally requires growth, it works relentlessly to assimilate all forms of capital. The natural consequence is that everything must be for sale. Values of freedom, independence, self-reliance, and even conservation are subservient to the goal of growth—which is really just growth of the financial Borg, not human welfare or the security of a habitable planet.
Back from the future collapse
Posted by Ugo Bardi on September 25, 2008 - 10:10am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Environment/Sustainability
Tags: collapse, peak oil, russia [list all tags]

With his book "Reinventing Collapse", Dmitry Orlov reports to us from a collapse that he has actually experienced with the fall of the Soviet Union. Russia's past is our future and Orlov's book is a time machine to there.


k Nation (Jim Kunstler)






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