EGU25-3532, updated on 14 Mar 2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu25-3532
EGU General Assembly 2025
© Author(s) 2025. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Oral | Tuesday, 29 Apr, 17:05–17:15 (CEST)
 
Room C
Social norms and groups structure safe operating spaces and exhibit regime shifts in renewable resource use in a social-ecological multi-layer network model
Max Bechthold1, Wolfram Barfuss2, André Butz3, Jannes Breier1, Sara Constantino4, Jobst Heitzig5, Luana Schwarz6, Sanam Vardag3, and Jonathan Donges1
Max Bechthold et al.
  • 1Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), ERSU, Germany (maxbecht@pik-potsdam.de)
  • 2Center for Development Research (ZEF), University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany
  • 3Institute for Environmental Physics, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany
  • 4Northeastern University, Boston, USA
  • 5Future Lab on Game Theory and Networks of Interacting Agents, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), Germany
  • 6Department Integrative Earth System Science, Max Planck Institute for Geoanthropology, Jena, Germany

Social norms are a key socio-cultural driver of human behaviour and have been identified as a central process in potential social tipping dynamics. They play a central role in governance and thus represent a possible intervention point for collective action problems in the Anthropocene, such as natural resource management. 
A detailed modelling framework for social norm change is needed to capture the dynamics of human societies and their feedback interactions with the natural environment. To date, resource use models often incorporate social norms in an oversimplified manner, as a robust and detailed coupled social-ecological model, scaling from the local to the global World-Earth scale, is lacking. 
Here we present a multi-level network framework with a complex contagion process for modelling the dynamics of descriptive and injunctive social norms. The framework is complemented by social groups and their attitudes, which can significantly influence the adoption of social norms. We integrate the modelling concept of norms together with an additional individual social learning component into a model of coupled social-ecological dynamics with a closed feedback loop, implemented in the copan:CORE framework for World--Earth modelling.
We find that norms generally bifurcate the behaviour space into two extreme states (sustainable vs. unsustainable) divided by regime shifts. Reaching a sustainable (i.e. safe) state becomes more likely with low thresholds of conforming to sustainable norms, as well as lower consideration rates of own resource harvesting success. The success of a generic social norm intervention is also found to be highly dependent on the group topology and exhibit a phase-transition like shape under certain conditions. The regime shifts in thresholds, individual learning and norm intervention hint at exploitable underlying tipping processes.
Our findings suggest that explicitly modelling social norm processes together with social groups enriches the dynamics of social-ecological models and determines safe operating spaces. Consequently, both should be taken into account when representing human behaviour in coupled World--Earth models.

How to cite: Bechthold, M., Barfuss, W., Butz, A., Breier, J., Constantino, S., Heitzig, J., Schwarz, L., Vardag, S., and Donges, J.: Social norms and groups structure safe operating spaces and exhibit regime shifts in renewable resource use in a social-ecological multi-layer network model, EGU General Assembly 2025, Vienna, Austria, 27 Apr–2 May 2025, EGU25-3532, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu25-3532, 2025.