Can anything be done to mitigate, or resolve, political polarization over the long term? We propose three kinds of actions..
Read MoreExtreme partisan positions have become the norm in politics, attractive for their dramatic and over-simplistic aspects.
Read MoreDigital and mainstream media are acting as accelerators of polarization, affirming ever deeper cycles of misunderstanding and extreme rhetoric.
Read MoreShielding children from mild risk-taking erodes their resilience into adulthood and contributes to polarization through intolerance to discomfort and the demand for further safetyism.
Read MoreHigh emotional states can easily be directed towards any single goal that relieves the anxiety, including simplified political solutions and conspiracies.
Read MoreAn influx of migrants and immigrants into wealthier nations often creates and widens schisms between citizens of host countries.
Read MoreThe cultures of people living in urban vs. rural areas have come to represent two different value systems that don’t sufficiently harmonize.
Read MoreWhen peoples’ basic needs are unmet, high emotional states, including anxiety, depression and aggression can set in, causing and exacerbating conflicts.
Read MoreToday, we live in a world in which left-brain thinking is the dominant mode. However, history shows that healthier, less polarized and more vibrant societies are otherwise.
Read MoreAccording to several historians, polarization is one of the major symptoms of civilizational decline. How and why is this so?
Read MorePolitical polarization has no single cause. It arises from a combination of different factors and conditions.
Read MoreIf Canadians and their leaders are to avoid further fragmentation, they need to move beyond deeply restricting notions of “left” and “right” in politics.
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