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  November 8, 2005



ParisBurning
Photo: Julie Fouchet/Taamallah Mehdi/SIPA for Time Magazine

   
I've been writing a lot recently about complexity and how it serves to make many of our world's most urgent and profound challenges intractable. Recent events have provided two extreme examples of this in New Orleans and Paris respectively. What radically different approaches might be used to address and cope with (not solve -- complex intractable challenges are not simply problems with solutions) these challenges?

Let's start with New Orleans. Chris Hallowell's 2001 book, Holding Back the Sea, has just been updated to talk about the impact of Katrina, which the book predicted. His publicist, in an e-mail to me, provides this synopsis:

Proposals for houses on stilts and building higher levees will not necessarily protect New Orleans from another major storm. New Orleans was blessed with a protective barrier of spongy wetlands that naturally soaked up dangerous storm surges. Much of these wetlands have vanished (16,000 acres per year are still being lost) due to levee construction causing these protectives areas to sink. Professor Hallowell believes that best long-term solution requires massive movement of Mississippi River silt to the outlying wetlands at the mouth of the river, restoring the wetlands to their former strength and absorbency. "By trying to protect New Orleans with an artificial levee barrier, we have destroyed a far more effective natural barrier," claims Hallowell.

So rebuilding the levees, even with massively expensive, higher, more high-tech barriers, will only raise the ante and delay the inevitable. And even if 'massive movement of Mississippi River silt to the outlying wetlands at the mouth of the river' were an affordable engineering and political possibility, to the point the levees could be removed, most of the existing economic activity in the area would have to be curtailed, reformed, or stopped altogether to prevent recurrence. What's more, there is some real doubt whether the 'renewed' wetlands would evolve in anything like the way the now-destroyed wetlands evolved, in a succession cycle that took centuries -- it is possible that just trying to 'restart' wetlands from something that looks like their pre-destruction form might actually set off a completely different, unpredictable succession cycle that might not protect New Orleans at all.

This is the gist of a complex problem: We cannot know all the variables and we therefore cannot predict what will happen with any useful degree of reliability. In such situations we cannot simply 'impose solutions' and have any expectation that they will achieve the desired results. We need to learn by trial and error, and minimize the damage in the process. The only sensible things we could do are simply unthinkable in a civilization that is incapable of understanding the complex consequences of its actions and radically altering its behaviours accordingly:

We could raze and remediate what's left of New Orleans and move the entire population to a safer, rebuilt city inland. Then we could try Hallowell's massive rebuilding of the marshlands using Mississippi River silt, assuming that wouldn't set off other unforeseen and unacceptable ecological changes. And if that actually worked, we could then start a new New Orleans on the site of the old one, with rigid environmental safeguards to prevent economic activity from re-eroding the rebuilt wetlands. Of course, we'd also need strong environmental safeguards all the way up the Mississippi to ensure other areas of the country didn't contribute to degrading the newly reconstructed area. And we'd need strong environmental safeguards to guarantee no severe oil-related 'accidents' in the Gulf.

Yeah, like that's going to happen. Ergo, intractability. So what we will do is all we, foolish, short-sighted, limited (in resources, money, and imagination) humans can do: We will throw some government money at traditional engineering projects -- levees -- to raise the ante with mother nature, we will 'encourage' (bribe) the rich and powerful in the area to want to reinvest in the city, we will leave the weak and poor, as always, to fend for themselves with what if anything 'trickles down', and we will throw the dice and gamble with lives and the environment.

And when that doesn't work, either because we run out of money or because nature responds next year with a more precise hit on the city, we'll do what we always do when the cost of cleaning up our mess gets too high: We'll walk away from it, like the giant toxic waste site it has already become, and leave nature to clean it up in her own good time, and we'll build elsewhere.

We shouldn't shed any tears or lose any sleep over this completely unsatisfactory 'solution'. There are no simple solutions to complex 'problems'. We cannot be other than who we are, and that is what we (and all creatures for that matter) do under such circumstances.

If you're not sufficiently outraged yet, I'm going to take a similar tack in describing approaches for Paris.

Let's start by dispelling some myths: What's happening in Paris (and will inevitably soon expand, copycat-style, to other cities) has almost nothing to do with religion. The Paris suburbs are very much like America's inner city cores: While Americans fled to the suburbs to escape new immigrant populations from dating their daughters, abandoning the cores to the poorest new immigrants, in Paris (and some other European cities) the whites stayed put in their more durable cities and forced the new immigrants to find cheaper places to live in the outer suburbs. So many of Paris' outer suburbs, like America's inner city ghettos, are filled with new immigrants, poor, unemployed and unemployable, uneducated, desperate, often uncomfortable with the native language, ostracized and disliked by the whites, bored and angry. The violence has been, for the most part, random, acts against property rather than people, and completely unorganized -- spontaneous, in fact.

The politicians, like their counterparts everywhere, are merely fanning the flames for personal political advantage, making a bad situation worse. The media, like their counterparts everywhere, are encouraging an increase and a spread of the violence by rushing to film every burning car and giving vandals their own reality TV show. Religious leaders on all sides, like their counterparts everywhere, are exploiting the situation to garner new recruits for their particular brand of mindless groupthink. Without the interference from the politicians, media and religious leaders, the uproar over the original incident would have died down quickly.

The $64 thousand question now is whether this copycat violence will jump the Atlantic.

Part of the problem, admittedly, is racism, by the white French in general and by the police in particular. The French program of requiring quick integration of minorities into the culture so that new immigrants and the poor feel their situation is their own fault, rather than systemic discrimination, has been much less successful than the comparable American program. This is probably because the US has learned from the race riots of the 1960s, which are a close analogue to the current French rioting. In the aftermath of that, American liberals and conservatives alike spouted the American Dream myth (anyone with ambition and hard work can accomplish anything they want in America, without breaking the law), and even supported token minority quotas to give the myth some credibility. It doesn't matter that study after study has shown that your chances of escaping the economic underclass are lower in the US than in almost any other affluent country. If enough people, including people who purport to really care about other people, repeat a myth, it becomes undeniable.

There is no comparable rêve français to suppress the discontent of the immigrants in Paris' desperate and isolated outer suburbs. The 'hand-up' social support infrastructure in Western Europe means that their immigrants are not so destitute as those in the American 'help yourself' system, but they are more sanguine of the fact that the system is rigged against them than most of the well-indoctrinated American minorities.

So what approach could be taken to resolve this intractable situation? The one that has been rumoured by French right-wingers to be the goal of 'provocative' Islamic religious leaders is autonomy. Let them establish, govern and run their own communities, and police themselves. This uggestion causes most of the French, who believe in integration, to gasp. It would be an admission of failure of an important political ideal. For that reason, it will never happen. It is also doubtful whether in this situation it could really work -- self-run communities only work when people in them can choose which community to belong to, and can vote with their feet when the rest of the community does something they don't like. The people in these suburbs are here because there is no other place for them to go.

The tired 'solution' of harsher law enforcement is equally unworkable. The police, it is reported, have been quite content to let the arson of empty vehicles continue -- they are smart enough to know that wading into such a situation will only aggravate it. They have focused their attention on crimes against people. Stricter laws and more police are not the answer, as Freakonomics has argued so effectively.

The other proposal from the right is stricter immigration laws. That approach actually makes some sense -- provided it can be equitably enforced so that people of no nation or race are favoured (difficult but not impossible). It could well keep the situation from getting worse, but it won't make it go away. Many of the minorities in France and other European countries are second and third generation -- they are French through and through. But they are still discriminated against, economically disadvantaged, and ghettoized. Here's my complete approach, as improbable as the one I suggested above for New Orleans.

Introduce a thorough and rigorous entrepreneurship program in all high schools and universities. Change laws to make it easier to establish and succeed in your own business and to employ others, by leveling the playing field and by shifting taxes from employment to the use of non-renewable resources and the production of non-reusable and waste materials. Provide a safety net that protects you -- once -- from the economic consequences of your business failing. Radically decentralize authority, so that more decisions can be made locally by the people themselves, while vigilantly monitoring standards of regulation and enforcement to ensure they are equally applied everywhere. Use government policy to redistribute wealth from rich communities to poor, in granting contracts and establishing locations for government services. Restrict immigration in a non-discriminatory way to levels that do not threaten either the existing social fabric or the carrying capacity of the country's land and infrastructure.

This is unlikely to happen, but I have a sense it isn't as impossible as the approach I suggested for New Orleans. I don't know if that's because the Europeans are ahead of us in North America in their social evolution, or because the scale of the challenge in New Orleans is more massive.

I'm not an expert in any of the disciplines that would be needed to vet the approaches I have outlined above, so it may be that, beyond being very difficult to do, they might not work. But I offer them as an example of the kind of complex thinking (no one size fits all, no single action fixes anything) that we need to start applying to the complex challenges we are grappling with today -- and will grapple with more and more in the future.

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