Life Cycle Model of Empire

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Description

Peng Lu and Dianhan Chen:

"The life cycle pattern is pervasive for both natural and social sciences, from events to empires. The man-land relationship governs the rising and falling cycles of empires. Based on the life cycle model of collective actions in 2016, we combine agent-based modeling, systemic dynamics, and numerical simulations, to build the life cycle model of empire. It aims to investigate the rise and fall process of major empires."

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Example

* Article: The Life Cycle Model and Empire Dynamics of China. Peng Lu and Dianhan Chena.

URL = pdf

"aims to investigate the rise and fall process of major empires (N=18) in the 2132-year history of China, from BC 221 to AD 1912. The core principle is to find the optimal solution, which achieves the best matching between simulated and real target empires."


Discussion

The Rise and Fall Dynamics in Empires

Peng Lu and Dianhan Chena:

"The rise, development, and decline of empires are affected by many factors.

Taagepera (1995) described the life cycle of the Empire as a flat-topped parabola, which suggests that imperial collapse must be an exceptional event due to exceptional circumstance . In previous studies, regional stability, revolutionary elites, imperial ideologies, abandoned brethren and state capacity are closely related to the imperial collapse .

Olson (2008) believes that the exist of large number of interest groups is a sufficient and necessary condition for imperial collapse [. The climate change is also considered as an important reason for the rise and decline of dynasties. For example, colder temperature led to the decline of Tang and Ming Dynasties, and high atmospheric moisture levels promoted the formation and development of big cities and empires. Besides, economical, financial, reserve currency and geopolitical role, and their relative power are also influential during the rise and fall of Empire .

In sociological fields, the reasonable explanation for the decline mechanism of agricultural empires is probably the demographic-structural theory . Population growth indirectly causes social crisis, by causing economic, political and social problems, which jointly affect social stability . In agricultural empires, the land is the most important resource. Population growth would lead to scarcity of materials, and intensified contradictions within elites, the Asabiya lost, and factional conflicts eventually leading to the collapse . When the growth of population exceeds the growth of land productivity, the systemic problems, such as rising prices, tax increases , and social movements will follow, which undermines affect social institutions and leads to decay of the country . Regarding to the rise-and-fall dynamics, many models were proposed. Collins (1978) proposed the geopolitics theory, focusing on territorial dynamics of empires.

It utilized three mechanisms, such as geopolitical resources, logistical loads, and the marchland position . The digital structural (1995) and ruler legitimacy models (1995) , then perfected this geopolitical model. Some use the sense of collectivity (Asabiya) to demonstrate the relationship between population and resources. Empire’s life cycle is determined by the rise and fall of Asabiya. Turchin (2003) argued that meta-ethnic frontiers is central in promoting Asabiya, and proposed the meta-ethnic frontier model to explain imperial cycles. He also expanded demographic-structural theory, and established Demographic-Fiscal and Elite Cycle models, to discusses the relationship between population density, elite reproduction, extraction ability, and national decline. For history of China, the dynastic cycle is defined as the periodic alternation of societies between autonomy and management.

The demographic structural theory becomes a principal model for China. Some use simple but effective models of bandits, peasants & rulers, to explored dynastic cycles [36, 37]. For Chu and Lee's model (1994), the population growth led to the shortage of resources, and more farmers became bandits. Under a certain scale, they became fatal threats to the rulers, and the regime will decay. Demographic structural theory can be still applied to political stability studies.

For example, Turchin (2010) and Ortmans et al. (2017) use it to predict the political pressures for USA and UK, as well as the factors and patterns of social & political stability worldwide. We apply the collective action model to simulate the empires in China, and the concept of Asabiya connects them both.

In his book, Historical dynamics: Why states rise and fall, Turchin (2003) discussed the similarity between Asabiya (the collective action ability of group) and empire cycles. For collective action, the rise and fall is captured by dynamic number of participants, determined by micro-level individual choices. If more people take part in, it will be stronger. Otherwise, it declines, with more and more people standing by as nonparticipants or free-riders. It also holds for empires where the people live. Full of corruptions and information bias , the empire will decay and die, with more and more people (non-supporters) hating the rulers. More people will become unloyalty, resistant, or uncooperative. For the healthy periods, the empire is with less corruption and information bias, with more and more supportive people who are loyalty to rulers of empire, with Passionarity. For stronger empires, major crisis can be even overcome, with massive supporters. Since 2016, the peak model has been used to explore the life cycle dynamics of collective actions. Hence, this can be also applicable to rise and fall dynamics of Empire. The microlevel mechanism of individuals or agents, under collective actions and empires, are similar to each other. The rise and fall of empires are determined by individuals, the fundamental actors of society. Based on behaviors of micro-level agents, we construct the life cycle model of empires, to simulate real life cycles in history."

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