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Power to the people: Participatory modeling for societal resilience

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Format
In person
Venue

Faculty of Behavioral and Social Sciences

Date
-

When communities face their most pressing challenges, managing disaster risk, adapting to climate change, navigating energy transitions, solutions rarely emerge from the top down. These problems are inherently messy: stakeholders clash over competing values, frame reality differently, and bring distinct expertise to the table. Yet this complexity, when engaged thoughtfully, becomes a source of strength.

Participatory modeling channels this strength by embedding stakeholders in the construction of formal problem representations. This transforms modeling from a unidirectional knowledge transfer into a process of collaborative knowledge co-production, enabling diverse perspectives to strengthen systems understanding and build collective agency.

Agent-based modeling (ABM) is particularly well-suited to this purpose. Its capacity to represent heterogeneous actors, capture emergent dynamics, and make assumptions explicit positions it as a powerful boundary object across disciplines and communities. 

This workshop convenes scholars and practitioners working at the intersection of participatory modeling, agent-based modeling, and stakeholder engagement. We aim to critically examine how these approaches address social complexity, share empirical findings, and develop more rigorous frameworks for participatory processes that genuinely redistribute agency in decision-making.

We invite 500-word abstracts (including title and references) addressing participatory modeling, agent-based modeling, and collaborative approaches to socially complex environmental and policy challenges. Please send your abstract to: [email protected] by June 9, 2026. Topics include:

  • Agent-based models as tools for stakeholder engagement and dialogue
  • Participatory modeling in climate adaptation, disaster preparedness, or energy transitions
  • Social complexity and heterogeneity in modeling practice
  • Boundary objects and interdisciplinary knowledge integration
  • Power, equity, and representation in participatory processes
  • Critical assessments of participatory approaches: limitations and challenges

No registration fees and plenary lectures will be livestreamed for remote attendees.

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