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Wednesday, May 06, 2026

How Human Ecology Shapes Social Democracy – Analysis


May 5, 2026 
By Sandra Ericson


Human ecology offers a framework for understanding how social systems in Nordic countries and New York shape participation, trust, and collective well-being.

The United States is a nation of extraordinary wealth and extraordinary contradiction. Tens of millions of Americans live in material insecurity, while aggregate wealth continues to expand. Institutional trust remains fragile, and the systems meant to deliver stability—healthcare, housing, education—often do so unevenly. These are not random misfortunes. They are the predictable outcomes of a social order organized in particular ways, reflecting deeper assumptions about how individuals relate to one another and to the systems that govern their lives. The education system, in particular, can serve as a compass for shaping social systems.

Human ecology offers a way to understand these patterns and systems. It is the study of the relationship between human beings and the totality of their environment—biological, social, economic, and cultural. It asks not only what policies exist but also how entire systems of life are structured and how those structures shape human possibility over time. Culture does not merely influence human development abstractly—it shapes the brain at the neural level, organizing the architecture of attention, emotion regulation, moral reasoning, and social perception in patterns that persist into adulthood.

This perspective helps explain why Nordic societies have developed high levels of trust, equality, and social cohesion, while the United States continues to struggle with fragmentation and inequality. It also helps illuminate why new political movements in American cities are beginning to resonate with community-based ideas rooted in interdependence and shared well-being. The Global Bildung Network continues to connect educators, policymakers, and institutions working to integrate human development, civic participation, and social welfare into public life.

Human Ecology and the Foundations of Social Democracy

Nordic schools are not primarily understood as preparation for the labor market; they are understood as arenas for civic and human formation within the Bildung tradition of folk education. There, every student matters equally because society’s interest in every child is equal. American schools, by contrast, have long carried the dual burden of democratic aspiration and industrial sorting—simultaneously promising equality of opportunity while structuring themselves to reproduce economic hierarchy. This duality has become increasingly visible over time and shapes how educational systems function today.

Human ecology makes the structure underlying these outcomes visible. It frames individuals not as isolated actors, but as participants embedded within multiple, interacting systems—families, schools, economies, and governments—that shape their development and their life chances. From this perspective, social outcomes are not incidental. They are produced by the alignment—or misalignment—of these systems. Human communities flourish or fail based on how equitably they distribute resources, opportunity, and care.

Human ecology is the study of the relationship between human beings and the totality of their environment—biological, social, economic, and cultural. When applied in educational settings, it integrates this understanding into lived learning, allowing students to see how individual choices and collective systems interact in real time. Critically, this learning is experiential—lessons are lived in classroom and lab settings, not merely memorized—allowing students to understand interdependence as a practical reality rather than an abstract principle.

It cultivates what might be called ecological citizenship: the understanding that personal well-being and collective well-being are not competing values, but deeply entwined.

The Formative Window

The single most well-established finding in the science of human development is that childhood, from birth through adolescence, is the period during which the brain is most neuroplastic and most receptive to the values, habits of mind, and social identities that will define the person across a lifetime. Culture does not merely influence child development abstractly—it shapes the brain at the neural level, organizing the architecture of attention, emotion regulation, moral reasoning, and social perception in patterns that persist into adulthood.

These are not lessons that are easily replicated later in life. They gradually solidify into the cognitive and emotional infrastructure of the adult self, preparing it for independent living. This is one of the primary mechanisms by which cultures are formed. In this sense, efforts to cultivate more humanistic, ecologically grounded, and democratically oriented cultures are shaped in early life, through the thousands of daily interactions in which a child learns what kind of world they inhabit and what kind of person they are expected to become.

The Nordic Proof of Concept


This educational concept has been tested and validated across more than 150 years of Nordic history. The Nordic countries today rank among the world’s most equal, most trusting, and most consistently happy societies: Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, and Norway hold top spots in the 2025 World Happiness Report, and Denmark, Norway, and Finland rank first, fourth, and fifth, respectively, on the U.S. News Quality of Life Index. Citizens in Norway work an average of 27 hours per week and enjoy universal healthcare, free university tuition, and generous parental leave. These social outcomes were built over generations, beginning with a revolution in their education system. These developments also unfolded within relatively high-trust, socially cohesive societies, where shared norms and institutional continuity reinforced their effects over time. Norway’s 1936 Folk School Reform reflects the revolution’s long-term benefits for all the Nordic countries.

The 19th-century Danish theologian, poet, and philosopher Nikolai Frederik Severin Grundtvig watched an uneducated peasantry enter the democratic era unprepared for self-governance and concluded that no amount of Latin grammar or classical instruction would equip ordinary people for citizenship. What they needed was Bildung—a living education grounded in history, culture, and civic life. In 1844, the first folkehøjskole (folk high school) opened in Denmark, embodying this vision: no grades, no degrees, no formal credentials, but open discussion and treating every student as a whole person capable of self-directed growth. The schools spread rapidly across Scandinavia, becoming vital nodes in the labor movement, in cooperative economic organizing, and in the broad project of building participatory democracy from the ground up.


Bildung did not remain in the schools. Within five years of constitutional reforms in Norway, educational reforms followed, and when social democratic labor parties rose to power across Scandinavia in the 1930s, education reform was listed as a top priority alongside democratic rights and equal justice. Citizen-building didn’t stay in the schools but also became part of“third spaces” across towns throughout the region. By 1974, Norway’s curriculum had been reformed into an educational system designed for democracy. It imposed legal obligations on teachers to cultivate open-minded, participatory attitudes in their students. The result was not only a policy change but also a civilizational shift toward becoming a society that has learned, across generations, to govern itself from the inside out.

Finland today exemplifies this legacy in its educational outcomes. All Finnish teachers hold master’s degrees and are selected from the top third of university graduates. Despite spending 23 percent less per student than the United States—$11,212 annually versus $14,321—Finland ranks 8th globally in education, while the United States ranks 31st. When Finland first led the international PISA assessments in 2000, it did so with a school-to-school variance of only 8 percent—meaning even its weakest schools produced capable, flourishing students. The United States, by contrast, exhibits severe achievement gaps stratified by race and socioeconomic status, firmly structured into the education system by its reliance on local property-tax funding that concentrates resources in wealthy communities and starves poor ones.

The Roots of American Educational Failure

Understanding why American education has consistently failed to cultivate democratic, humanistic citizens in so many schools requires excavating its historical foundations. Horace Mann, the “father of American public education,” built the public school system influenced by three powerful forces: the emerging industrial age needing to grow a disciplined workforce; Calvinist Protestant theology, which prioritized moral self-regulation and hard work, deferring the benefits until later; and liberalism, which believed that civic life required literate, law-abiding citizens. Mann drew his structural model directly from Prussian compulsory schooling—a system designed by the Prussian state to produce obedient, productive subjects for industrial and military order. He imported its logic to Massachusetts and centralized oversight, standardized the curriculum, made attendance compulsory, and instituted professional teacher training through what were called the ‘normal’ schools.

Crucially, Mann also saw the public school as a mechanism of social control—a means of absorbing waves of Catholic immigrants, suppressing labor radicalism, and instilling in working-class children values of deference and non-rebellion. His 1848 Annual Report explicitly argued that common schooling would protect property and social order by shaping children before they could develop dangerous political consciousness. This ideological heritage—a confluence of religious orthodoxy, industrial capitalist requirements, and social order management—has never been fully transcended in the American educational tradition. It explains the persistent emphasis on rote learning, standardized measurement, competitive individual performance, and workforce preparation that defines American schooling today, and its persistent failure to cultivate the cooperative, democratic, and holistic civic formation that Grundtvig’s Bildung offered the Nordic countries.

The contrast in governing philosophy is notable. Where the Nordic model asks whether a child is flourishing as a full human being, the American model predominantly asks whether a student is meeting government benchmarks—a question shaped more by industrial production logic than by a broader philosophy of human development. The result is a society that produces workers and consumers far more reliably than it produces citizens engaged in shaping their own social and economic conditions.

The Transformation Only Education Can Deliver

Human ecology programs in U.S. public K–12 schools could address several of these systemic gaps. Graduates of a human ecology curriculum would enter adulthood with the tools to understand and navigate the local, state, and national systems shaping their lives and to recognize inequality as structural rather than natural. The social democratic principles at the curriculum’s core—such as interdependence, shared responsibility, equitable resource distribution—would be taught not as an ideology but as lived experience, practiced daily from kindergarten through high school graduation.

This concept gained national attention in the 1970s when Urie Bronfenbrenner at Cornell University began formalizing his human ecological model and presented its fullest early statement in his 1979 book, The Ecology of Human Development, which quickly influenced thinking about how programs and policies shape children’s environments. His work on Head Startin the 1960s and his later ecological systems theory framed laws, institutions, and social programs as broad national systems that powerfully shaped everyday settings like families and schools. He set up a template through the College of Human Ecology at Cornell University to enable and support multi‑level policy-thinking.

Bronfenbrenner’s model shifted thinking about both policy and human lives by showing how human development is shaped—from families and schools to workplaces, communities, and national culture. It contributed to ecological policy design by showing that laws, institutions, and social programs at the “outer” levels filter down into everyday settings, aligning across multiple levels rather than focusing only on individuals. For understanding human life, his policy template reframes people not as isolated actors but as players embedded in many dynamic systems over time, highlighting how historical events, economic cycles, and long‑term stress or support accumulate to influence people’s life chances and well‑being.

On the climate crisis, the case is especially compelling. Young people educated in place-based civic science, who learn to understand their local environment as a shared commons and connect it to global ecological challenges, develop what researchers identify as “a sense of belonging to something larger than themselves,” which buffers against despair and builds agency. Studies of adolescents engaged in environmental civic action confirm that collective, place-based learning builds young people’s conviction that coordinated effort can actually address the climate emergency. This kind of psychological agency is a key precondition for the political will that meaningful climate action requires, and it tends to emerge through sustained, lived learning rather than short-term messaging. It must be cultivated in schools, in schools where Human Ecology programs are core.

Learning environments that help students trace violence and inequality to structural exclusion and systemic forces cancan equip them with deeper analytical tools. Children educated to think ecologically understand that their prosperity is not in competition with others’—that the degradation of any part of the human system weakens the whole. On health, the effects are generational: because lessons are lived daily in family and community practice, socially beneficial values and healthy habits compound across generations, reducing the staggering medical and social costs the United States pays for homelessness, incarceration, public assistance, and social and civic fragmentation. Preventing these outcomes upstream is often more effective than addressing them after they emerge.

The Seed and the Harvest


History suggests that cultures do not change in election cycles. The Nordic countries did not become the world’s most equal and most genuinely democratic societies because of a single election or a single policy. They developed along this trajectory over generations, beginning with Grundtvig’s folk high schools in the 1840s, which emphasized education oriented toward cooperation, participation, and shared civic life. These developments also unfolded within relatively high-trust, socially cohesive societies, where shared norms and institutional continuity reinforced their effects over time. That orientation was formalized in law, education, and in the habits of civic life for more than a century. Its results, in happiness, health, equality, and democratic vitality, are widely recognized.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s New York is telling America that hunger for a better life exists in their city, too. Voters who turned out for free transit and rent freezes were not merely voting for policies; they were voting for a vision of life organized around human dignity and mutual responsibility. His election reflects a broader response to what American possibility might mean under changing conditions. But that vision cannot rest on a single gifted mayor. It requires a generation of citizens, educated to understand why it is right, why it works, and how to build it—not as followers of a charismatic leader, but as people who have known since childhood that they belong to one another.

The capacity to build such systems depends on how societies cultivate an understanding of interdependence, participation, and shared responsibility over time. These capacities are shaped across multiple domains—education, institutions, and civic life—rather than through any single reform. Planted early, these capacities can grow across generations. The children learning within these systems are not simply participants in the present—they are the conditions of the future. The question is not whether change is possible, but whether the systems that produce it are cultivated with intention.


Author Bio: Sandra Ericson is an author and retired educator. She chaired the Consumer Arts and Science Department at City College of San Franciscofor nearly three decades. She is a contributor to the Observatory.

Credit Line: This article was produced by Earth | Food | Life, a project of the Independent Media Institute. It is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0).





Tuesday, May 05, 2026

What shapes the content of our dreams?

A new study of researchers at the IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca reveals how personal traits and life experiences influence dream content


IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca





Why do our dreams sometimes feel vivid and immersive, while at other times they seem fragmented or difficult to interpret? A new study conducted by researchers at the IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca provides new insights into what determines the content of dreams, showing that both individual characteristics and shared life experiences play a key role in shaping what we dream.

The research, published in Communications Psychology, analyzed over 3,700 reports of dream and waking experiences collected from 287 participants aged 18 to 70. Over a two-week period, volunteers recorded their experiences daily, while researchers gathered detailed information about their sleep patterns, cognitive abilities, personality traits, and psychological characteristics.

Using advanced natural language processing (NLP) techniques, the team was able to quantitatively analyze the semantic structure of dreams. The findings reveal that dream content is not random or chaotic, but instead reflects a complex interplay between personal traits, such as tendency to mind-wander, interest in dreams, and sleep quality, and external events, including large-scale societal experiences like the COVID-19 pandemic.

When examining the words participants used to describe both their daily lives and their dreams, the research team observed how everyday life is transformed during sleep. Rather than simply replaying waking experiences, dreams appear to reinterpret them. Elements from daily routines, such as work environments, healthcare settings, or education, do not reappear as they are. Instead, they are reorganized into vivid, immersive scenarios, often blending together different contexts and shifting perspectives into unfamiliar landscapes. This suggests that dreams do not just reflect reality, but actively reshape it, integrating fragments of past experiences with imagined or anticipated ones to create novel, sometimes surreal, scenarios.

These transformations also vary across individuals. For example, individuals more prone to mind-wandering tended to report more fragmented and rapidly changing dream scenarios, while those who had a strong belief in the value, meaning, and significance of dreaming in general and of their dreams in particular, experienced perceptually richer and more immersive dream content. Analyses of data collected during the COVID-19 lockdown by researchers at Sapienza University of Rome, and compared with data gathered in the subsequent months and years by the IMT School team, showed that dreams during the lockdown were characterized by heightened emotional intensity and more frequent references to constraints and limitations, reflecting the broader social context. These effects gradually diminished over time, suggesting that dream content evolves in parallel with psychological adaptation to major life events.

“Our findings show that dreams are not just a reflection of past experiences, but a dynamic process shaped by who we are and what we live through,” explains Valentina Elce, researcher at the IMT School and lead author of the paper. “By combining large-scale data with computational methods, we were able to uncover patterns in dream content that were previously difficult to detect.”

The study also highlights the potential of artificial intelligence in dream research, demonstrating that NLP models can reliably capture the meaning and structure of dream reports with accuracy comparable to human independent evaluators. This opens new possibilities for studying consciousness, memory, and mental health in a scalable and reproducible way.

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This work was supported by a grant from the BIAL Foundation (#091/2020) and by the TweakDreams ERC Starting Grant (#948891). The research was conducted at the IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca, in collaboration with researchers from Sapienza University of Rome and the University of Camerino.

  

Dreaming while awake: Dream-like states are not confined to sleep





Institut du Cerveau (Paris Brain Institute)






By convention, wakefulness and sleep are regarded as physiologically distinct states. It is therefore tempting to assume that the images, sensations, and ideas that cross our minds while we are awake are fundamentally different in nature from those we experience while we sleep, and especially while we dream.

Yet this is far from obvious. Being awake is not synonymous with being attentive, fully aware of one's surroundings, or able to act and think rationally,” explains Delphine Oudiette, co-leader of the DreamTeam. “We now know that there is a continuum between wakefulness and sleep, with intermediate states such as mind-wandering or mind-blanking, during which certain regions of the brain may be asleep. What remained to be determined was whether the content of our thoughts also varies independently of our state of vigilance.”

To answer this question, the researchers chose to study sleep onset, the transitional stage between wakefulness and sleep.

Sleep onset allows us to capture, within a very short time span, fluctuations in our state of vigilance, from wakefulness to sleep, and to observe the mental experiences associated with them,” says Nicolas Decat, a PhD student at the Paris Brain Institute and first author of the study. “As we drift toward sleep, sensations, visions, and snippets of speech unfold—what are commonly called hypnagogic experiences. Tracing the evolution from ordinary thought to dream-like narrative can help us understand how a dream emerges.”

Nap experts to the rescue

To explore the transition between wakefulness and sleep, the team conducted a study with 92 participants who were accustomed to napping and trained to report the content of their thoughts upon interruption.

The researchers used an experimental setup inspired by Thomas Edison. According to legend, the inventor had a habit of falling asleep in his armchair while holding a heavy object, the fall of which would wake him at the threshold of sleep; he would then make use of the whirlwind of creative ideas that flooded his mind during this critical moment.

After each interruption of their nap—either by dropping a bottle held in the hand or by an alarm—participants were asked to describe their mental experience of the previous ten seconds, then rate it on four dimensions: bizarreness, fluidity, spontaneity, and perceived level of wakefulness. In parallel, their brain activity was continuously recorded with an EEG cap.

The researchers then let the data speak for themselves, applying a clustering algorithm that imposed no preconceived categories.

This data-driven approach was essential for us, because in research, there is no consensus on what hypnagogic experiences actually are. It was important not to bias this exploration with our own definitions or beliefs,” says Nicolas Decat.

A brain signature of dream-like states

The analysis revealed not the two mental states one might expect—dreaming and waking thought—but four. The first (C1) was characterized by fleeting recollections (“An image of my dad crossed my mind”); the second (C2), by a high level of connection to the surrounding environment (“I was listening to the street sounds”); the third (C3), by its bizarreness (“I saw images of small aliens”); and the last (C4), by a high level of voluntary control (“I was thinking about what I would do tomorrow”).

Each of these four mental states appeared across all three vigilance stages measured: wakefulness, sleep onset, and light sleep.

This is the major finding of our study. The mental states traditionally associated with dreaming can arise just as well when we are asleep as when we are awake. In other words, the content of our thoughts does not follow the boundaries between waking and sleep! One of our participants, while awake, reported seeing ants crawling on her body against a backdrop of crossword puzzles. Conversely, another participant mentally went through his schedule for the next day while he was fully asleep,” adds the researcher.

The team then went further, searching for neurophysiological markers specific to each mental state. By analyzing the complexity of the EEG signal, its spectral power, and the functional connectivity between brain regions, the researchers identified distinctive signatures.

They show that there is a specific brain signature for the “bizarre” C3 mental content—that is, the dream-like state. It is characterized by reduced long-range connectivity between the frontal and occipital regions of the brain.

This signature may well be the correlate of what we feel in such a state: lucid reasoning is overtaken by a whirlwind of vivid sensations characteristic of dreams,” suggests Nicolas Decat.

Mental activity and introspection

If dreaming is not specific to sleep, why do we have the impression that extravagant mental content occurs only in the depths of the night, when we are oblivious to the world around us?

This preconception probably stems from a memory bias. We mainly remember dreams that come with strong emotions or those to which we attach particular meaning. Yet it is just as common to dream that we are working!” notes Nicolas Decat. “Conversely, some people report that fanciful daytime thoughts—elusive, like fragments of a dream—sometimes surface during their everyday activities. Because these thoughts are seen as incongruous, they may well be more frequent than we imagine, but we tend to dismiss them."

Potential applications for sleep disorders

We are generally not very good at judging our own level of vigilance or describing the content of our thoughts. As a result, some people suffering from insomnia regularly complain of spending entire nights without sleeping, even though polysomnographic measurements taken in sleep clinics indicate otherwise.

This is what we call paradoxical insomnia: a mismatch between the patient's experience and clinical observations based on conventional sleep-stage criteria.

These criteria are probably inadequate. Our study proposes a new one—mental content— which may be better aligned with what these patients actually experience. Through this lens, some of them may spend an unusually long time in an alert state (C2), hyperconnected to the outside world, or, conversely, very little time in a dream-like state (C3), blurring the line between their waking and sleeping lives,” explains Delphine Oudiette. “Beyond giving patients' reports the weight they deserve, this approach paves the way to identifying objective markers of insomnia.”

Monday, May 04, 2026

Imprisoned Iranian Nobel laureate Mohammadi rushed to hospital following cardiac 'crisis'


Iran’s imprisoned Nobel peace prize winner Narges Mohammadi has been transferred to hospital to receive urgent care after experiencing a “catastrophic deterioration” of her health, a foundation run by her family said on Saturday. Mohammadi was moved on Friday after suffering a heart attack and experiencing two episodes of “complete” unconsciousness, it said.


Issued on:  03/05/2026 - 
By: FRANCE 24
Video by: Ethan HAJJI/Florent MARCHAIS

Iranian Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi was imprisoned in mid-December.
© AFP/ File picture
01:47




Detained Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi has been hospitalised in Iran, her supporters said, “following a catastrophic deterioration of her health”.

Mohammadi, who won the peace prize in 2023 in recognition of more than two decades of rights campaigning, was arrested in December in Iran’s eastern city of Mashhad after speaking out against the country’s clerical authorities at a funeral ceremony.


Her supporters had been issuing warnings for months about her health, saying in late March that she had suffered a suspected heart attack but received inadequate medical treatment.


In a statement posted by her foundation on Friday, they said she was “urgently transferred to a hospital in Zanjan today” after a rapid deterioration, “including two episodes of complete loss of consciousness and a severe cardiac crisis”.

The statement said her family described the move as a “last-minute action” that could prove too late.

In Oslo the Norwegian Nobel Committee urged the Iranian authorities “to immediately transfer Narges Mohammadi to her dedicated medical team in Tehran”.

“Without such treatment, her life remains at risk,” committee chair Jorgen Watne Frydnes said. “Her life is now in the hands of the Iranian authorities.”

In a social media post, her lawyer Mostafa Nili said Mohammadi initially refused to be transferred to hospital after fainting the first time from a sudden drop in blood pressure, because of previous warnings from medics that Zanjan hospital was not capable of treating her.

But, following a second collapse and a further deterioration, she was moved to the facility.

“According to the neurologist, despite her serious cardiac issues, addressing her neurological state is currently the clinical priority,” Nili said.

Over the past quarter of a century, Mohammadi, 53, has been repeatedly tried and jailed for her campaigning against Iran’s use of capital punishment and its mandatory dress code for women.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)