The
SCID Project
- The Social Complexity
of Immigration and Diversity
SCID is a joint project between:
that will run from September 2010 to August 2015. It is funded by
the EPSRC under its Complexity for the Real World Initiative.
Its aims are:
- To develop novel complexity techniques. SCID will develop
techniques of working at complementary levels of abstraction.
- To develop new families of complexity models. SCID will develop
new families of social simulation models, focused on currently
unexplored interactions between different social mechanisms that are
thought to be important in society at large.
- To link micro and macro social theory. Using novel methods, SCID
will show how some aspects of the target social phenomena can be
explained as emergent phenomena arising from individual social
interactions, bridging the gap between the micro-evidence about
individual behaviour up to macro accounts of aggregate trends and
patterns.
- To inform policy makers in the area of immigration, diversity and
social cohesion.
Non-technical
summary:
Ours has been dubbed the 'age of migration'. Immigration is a major
political issue, with increasing media coverage, rising
anti-immigration sentiment and the rise of anti-immigration political
parties. The issue of migration sits centrally within the wider debate
about ethnic and religious diversity and its effects on social
cohesion. We are still, though, a long way from understanding these
issues and their potential consequences. They seem to rest on beliefs
about national identity and ethnicity, but cannot be divorced from the
effects of social class, education, economic competition and
inequality, as well as the influences of geographical and social
segregation, social structures and institutions. This project will
integrate the two very different disciplines, social science and
complexity science, in order to gain new understanding of these
complex, social issues. It will do this by building a series of
computer simulation models of these social processes.
One could think these as "Serious Sims" programmes that track the
social interactions between many individuals. Such simulations allow
'what if' experiments to be performed so that a deeper understanding of
the possible outcomes for the society as a whole can be established
based on the interactions of many individuals. A difficulty with the
computer simulation of complex systems is that if they are made
realistic (in the sense of how people actually behave) it becomes very
complex, which makes the simulation hard to understand, whilst if they
are made simple enough to understand they can be too abstract to mean
anything useful in terms of real people. This project aims to get
around this by making "chains" of related models, starting with a
complex, 'descriptive' model and then simplifying in stages, so that
each simulation is a model of the one "below" it. The simpler models
help us understand what is going on in the more complex ones. The more
complex models reveal in what ways the simpler ones are accurate as
well as the ways they over-simplify. In this way this project will
combine the relevance of social science with the rigour of the "hard"
sciences, but at the cost of having to build, check and maintain whole
chains of models. Building on an established collaboration between
social and complexity scientists in Manchester, this project will
integrate the two disciplines to produce new insights, techniques and
approaches for policy makers and their advisors.
However this will require both the complexity and social scientists to
develop new techniques. The complexity scientists will develop new
families of computer models that capture several aspects of society in
one simulation, including: how the membership of different groups,
origins, classes, etc. are signalled by people (e.g. the way they
dress, or their attitudes); the advantages and disadvantages of
belonging to several different social groups at the same time; how
different but parallel social networks might relate to each other; and
how the views of people on specific issues might change in response to
their friends, wider group and even politicians. The social scientists
will develop ways of relating these kinds of models to the rich sources
of social data that are available, and will collect additional social
data where these sources prove inadequate. They will also ensure that
the modelling results are interpreted meaningfully and usefully, in
particular in ensuring that they are not over-interpreted. By bringing
together the social science evidence, the layers of simulation models
and the combined expertise of the researchers this project aims to make
real progress in understanding the complex, important yet sensitive
issues surrounding the processes that underlie the effects of
immigration and diversity on social cohesion and integration. From the
beginning it will involve policy experts and decision makers to help
guide the project and ensure its relevance.
Explanatory
Documents:
- About the
Partners: HTML, PDF
- A
Description of the Project: HTML,
PDF
- The
Management Structure: HTML, PDF