Polarization and the Psychology of Collectives.

Publication Year
2024

Type

Journal Article
Abstract

Achieving global sustainability in the face of climate change, pandemics, and other global systemic threats will require collective intelligence and collective action beyond what we are currently experiencing. Increasing polarization within nations and populist trends that undercut international cooperation make the problem even harder. Allegiance within groups is often strengthened because of conflict among groups, leading to a form of polarization termed "affective." Hope for addressing these global problems will require recognition of the commonality in threats facing all groups collective intelligence that integrates relevant inputs from all sources but fights misinformation and coordinated, cooperative collective action. Elinor Ostrom's notion of polycentric governance, involving centers of decision-making from the local to the global in a complex interacting framework, may provide a possible pathway to achieve these goals.

Journal
Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science
Volume
19
Issue
2
Pages
335-343
Date Published
03/2024
ISSN Number
1745-6924
Alternate Journal
Perspect Psychol Sci
PMID
37555427