Democratic theory offers rich accounts of rights, equality, participation, representation, and public reason, while empirical research has developed increasingly sophisticated measures of democratic performance and backsliding. Yet many of the most consequential failures of democratic life are not well captured either by static scores or by institutional checklists alone. They emerge through dynamic interactions among material insecurity, weakened public roles, declining recognition, reduced agency, deteriorating commons, and increasingly manipulative or noisy information environments. This paper proposes a portable coherence framework for analyzing such dynamics across a bounded class of durable social systems. It models social-system health in terms of six interacting variables: security, structured stake, recognition, agency, commons quality, and manipulation or noise. Democracy is the central case throughout, but also a specially normative one: democratic coherence must be sustained under conditions of political equality, pluralism, protected opposition, lawful contestation, and non-domination. On that basis, the paper offers a compact diagnostic vocabulary for tracing different trajectories of resilience, hollowing, and fragility; distinguishes several democratic failure modes, including fear-driven collapse, comfort plateau, tribal comfort, and fragile resistance; and argues that repair should be understood as a stacked design problem in which material security, structured stake, civic roles, institutional quality, and information-system design reinforce one another rather than being treated in isolation. Portability matters because it clarifies what remains constant across domains---the functional role of the variables---and what varies: their concrete content and the criterion of health. The framework is not offered as a universal score or as a complete causal model. Its purpose is diagnostic, comparative, and design-oriented: to relate background conditions of participation to fragility and repair, while clarifying what is distinctive about democratic health as a form of coherence compatible with equal citizenship and enduring disagreement.
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Amy Gunville (Trepekli)
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Amy Gunville (Trepekli) (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69f2a47b8c0f03fd677637ee — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19862299
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