Social Resilience to Nuclear Winter: Lessons from the Late Antique
Little Ice Age.
Abstract
The threat of nuclear winter from a regional nuclear war is an
existential hazard that must be addressed to ensure the shared future of
humanity. Here a cross-cultural analysis of 20 societies that
experienced the Late Antique Little Ice Age (ca. 536-556CE) is
performed. The climatic conditions of the Late Antique Little Ice Age
are strikingly similar to those modeled as resulting from a regional
nuclear war employing low-yield nuclear weapons, and thus provides a
context in which mechanisms of resilience to nuclear winter might be
empirically identified. It is argued that broad political participation
fostering bridging ties between communities, agencies, and organizations
was a key elements of social resilience to the Late Antique Little Ice
Age, and may indicate a means to foster resilience to nuclear winter
today.