The Irawadi Dynamic Model (IDM) presents a conditional political typology framework that maps the relationships between four distinct political actor profiles and the structural conditions — primarily economic performance and institutional trust — that determine which profiles gain or lose political power at any given moment. Unlike conventional left-right political analysis, the model makes no normative judgments about which actors are morally correct. Instead, it treats political outcomes as conditional emergent properties of the interaction between actor characteristics and environmental variables. The model identifies four archetypal political profiles: the Apolitical Discontented (A1), the Progressive Left-Liberal (A2), the National Conservative (A3), and the Authoritarian Paternalist (A4). It demonstrates that these profiles interact differently under three distinct economic and institutional conditions — stability, deterioration, and collapse — and that transitions carry significant asymmetric ratchet effects. The model is validated against historical cases including Weimar Germany, post-Soviet Eastern Europe, and contemporary global electoral trends.
Permana Putra Irawadi (Tue,) studied this question.