The 6 Dimensions of Civilization
CivStat measures civilization through six interconnected dimensions. Each dimension captures a fundamental aspect of human progress — from the absence of violence to the capacity for collective action. Together, they form the Civilization Score (CivScore), a composite index that tracks the trajectory of human civilization over 7,000 years.
Dimension Weights in CivScore
The CivScore is calculated as a weighted combination of all six dimensions. Welfare receives the highest weight (30%) as the most fundamental measure of human well-being. Conflict is subtracted (−15%) as it represents the negation of civilizational progress.
CivScore = Welfare(30%) + Knowledge(20%) + Freedom(20%) + Cooperation(15%) + Sustainability(10%) − Conflict(15%)
Conflict
Freedom from Organized Violence
Definition
The Conflict dimension measures the degree to which a society is free from organized, large-scale violence. Rather than tracking absolute death tolls, CivStat follows Steven Pinker's population-normalized methodology: violence is measured as a proportion of the living population at the time, enabling meaningful comparison across millennia.
Why It Matters
Violence is the most fundamental threat to civilization. A society cannot invest in welfare, knowledge, or freedom when its citizens face existential threats from warfare, terrorism, or political repression. The decline of violence — from prehistoric rates of ~15% violent deaths to modern rates below 0.01% — represents one of humanity's greatest achievements, yet one that remains fragile and reversible.
Key Indicators
War Deaths per 100k
Battle-related deaths from interstate and civil wars, normalized per 100,000 population. Uses UCDP/PRIO Armed Conflict Dataset for modern data (1946–present) and historical estimates from Pinker, Keeley, and archaeological evidence for earlier periods.
Refugee Index
Forcibly displaced persons as a percentage of world population. Captures the humanitarian consequences of conflict beyond direct casualties. Includes refugees, internally displaced persons (IDPs), and asylum seekers.
Political Violence Index
Frequency and severity of state-sponsored violence against civilians, including extrajudicial killings, political imprisonment, and systematic repression. Incorporates Political Terror Scale (PTS) and CIRI Human Rights Dataset.
Terrorism Index
Frequency, casualties, and societal impact of terrorist attacks. Based on the Global Terrorism Database (GTD) for events since 1970, supplemented by historical estimates for earlier periods of asymmetric violence.
Historical Narrative
In prehistoric tribal societies, archaeological evidence suggests that approximately 15% of all humans died from violence — making war the leading cause of death. The emergence of centralized states (the 'Leviathan' effect) dramatically reduced interpersonal violence, though it introduced new forms of organized warfare. The 20th century saw unprecedented absolute casualties (two World Wars), yet the per-capita violence rate remained far below prehistoric levels. Since 1945, interstate wars have become remarkably rare, replaced by civil conflicts and terrorism as the primary forms of organized violence.
Country Comparison
Norway
97No armed conflict since WWII, minimal political violence, strong rule of law, negligible terrorism risk. Consistent top-5 ranking on the Global Peace Index.
Syria
8Devastating civil war (2011–present) with 500,000+ deaths, 13 million displaced, systematic state violence, and active terrorism from multiple factions.
Key Insight
The most important finding in CivStat's Conflict dimension: violence has declined dramatically in per-capita terms over millennia, but the gains are fragile. The number of active conflicts in 2024 (56) is at an all-time high, even as per-capita violence remains historically low.
Welfare
Basic Needs & Human Well-Being
Definition
The Welfare dimension captures the degree to which a society meets the fundamental needs of its population — health, nutrition, shelter, and economic security. It reflects not just survival, but the quality of life and human flourishing that civilization makes possible.
Why It Matters
Welfare is the foundation upon which all other dimensions of civilization rest. A society cannot pursue knowledge, freedom, or sustainability when its citizens lack clean water, adequate nutrition, or basic healthcare. The transformation of welfare over the past two centuries — from a world where half of all children died before age 5 to one where child mortality is below 4% — represents the single largest improvement in the human condition in history.
Key Indicators
Life Expectancy
Average life expectancy at birth, the single most comprehensive measure of population health. Captures improvements in nutrition, sanitation, medicine, and public health infrastructure.
Child Mortality
Under-5 mortality rate per 1,000 live births. Inversely normalized (lower is better). One of the most sensitive indicators of societal health infrastructure and overall development.
Nutrition Security
Prevalence of undernourishment (inverted) combined with caloric availability per capita. Captures both the absence of hunger and the adequacy of food systems.
Clean Water Access
Percentage of population with access to safely managed drinking water services. A fundamental determinant of health outcomes and disease prevention.
Historical Narrative
For most of human history, life was — as Thomas Hobbes described — 'nasty, brutish, and short.' Average life expectancy hovered around 25–35 years until the 18th century, constrained by endemic disease, malnutrition, and infant mortality. The revolution began with the germ theory of disease in the 1860s, followed by clean water infrastructure, vaccination, antibiotics, and modern agriculture. Between 1900 and 2024, global life expectancy more than doubled from ~31 to ~73 years — the most dramatic improvement in human welfare in recorded history.
Country Comparison
Norway
95Life expectancy 84+ years, under-5 mortality 2.3 per 1,000, universal healthcare, virtually zero hunger, 100% clean water access.
Sierra Leone
22Life expectancy ~55 years, under-5 mortality ~105 per 1,000, food insecurity affecting 60% of population, limited clean water access outside urban centers.
Key Insight
The Welfare dimension shows the most consistent upward trend of all six dimensions. Even during periods of conflict and political upheaval, the underlying trajectory of health and nutrition has been overwhelmingly positive — a testament to the cumulative nature of medical and agricultural knowledge.
Knowledge
Knowledge Creation & Diffusion
Definition
The Knowledge dimension measures a civilization's capacity to generate, preserve, and disseminate knowledge. It encompasses formal education, scientific research, technological innovation, and information infrastructure — the intellectual capital that drives all other forms of progress.
Why It Matters
Knowledge is the engine of civilization. Every improvement in welfare, freedom, sustainability, and cooperation depends on the accumulation and application of knowledge. The exponential growth of scientific output — from a few hundred papers per year in 1700 to over 3 million in 2024 — reflects the accelerating pace of human learning and its transformative power.
Key Indicators
Scientific Publications
Annual peer-reviewed scientific publications worldwide, log-normalized to account for exponential growth. Captures the pace of knowledge creation across all disciplines.
School Enrollment
Gross enrollment ratio across primary, secondary, and tertiary education. Weighted composite reflecting both breadth (primary) and depth (tertiary) of educational access.
AI Adoption Index
Composite measure of artificial intelligence readiness, investment, and deployment. Reflects the cutting edge of knowledge application in the 21st century. Only applicable from ~2010 onward.
Patent Filings
Annual patent applications filed worldwide, log-normalized. Captures the translation of knowledge into commercially applicable innovation.
Historical Narrative
Human knowledge accumulation follows a dramatic hockey-stick curve. For millennia, literacy was confined to tiny elites — perhaps 1% of the population in ancient Egypt or Rome. The printing press (1440s) began democratizing knowledge, but mass literacy didn't arrive until the 19th century. Scientific output has grown exponentially: from approximately 300 scientific journals in 1800 to 30,000 by 2000 to over 50,000 today. The number of scientific papers published doubles approximately every 9 years. This acceleration shows no sign of slowing — and with AI tools augmenting research, the pace may increase further.
Country Comparison
South Korea
8899.2% literacy, 70%+ tertiary enrollment, 4.8% of GDP on R&D (world's highest), leading AI adoption, top-10 patent filer globally.
Sierra Leone
1543% adult literacy, ~40% primary completion rate, minimal research output, negligible patent activity, early-stage digital infrastructure.
Key Insight
Knowledge is the only dimension that has never experienced a sustained global decline. Even the fall of Rome, which devastated European learning, was offset by flourishing knowledge centers in the Islamic world, China, and India. In the modern era, the exponential growth of scientific output makes Knowledge the most reliably upward-trending dimension.
Freedom
Civil & Political Liberties
Definition
The Freedom dimension measures the extent to which individuals enjoy civil liberties, political rights, and protection from arbitrary state power. It encompasses democratic governance, press freedom, rule of law, and the protection of minority rights.
Why It Matters
Freedom is both an end in itself — a fundamental human aspiration — and an instrumental enabler of progress. Amartya Sen demonstrated that no functioning democracy has ever suffered a major famine. Free societies tend to be more innovative, more stable, and more responsive to citizens' needs. Yet freedom is also the most contested and fragile of the six dimensions.
Key Indicators
Press Freedom Index
Composite score reflecting media independence, pluralism, transparency, and journalist safety. Based on the Reporters Without Borders (RSF) methodology and expert surveys.
Democracy Index
Comprehensive measure of democratic quality incorporating electoral process, civil liberties, political participation, political culture, and government functioning. Combines V-Dem, Polity5, and EIU Democracy Index data.
Civil Liberties Score
Assessment of individual rights including freedom of expression, assembly, religion, and association. Based on Freedom House's annual evaluation of 210 countries and territories.
Voting Rights Index
Measures the breadth and quality of suffrage — not just the formal right to vote, but also voter registration accessibility, electoral integrity, and meaningful political competition.
Historical Narrative
For most of recorded history, political freedom was virtually nonexistent. Even Athenian democracy (5th century BCE) excluded women, slaves, and foreigners — perhaps 10–15% of the population could vote. The modern expansion of freedom began with the Enlightenment and accelerated after World War II. In 1900, no country had full universal suffrage. By 1950, 22% of the world's countries were democracies. The 'third wave' of democratization (1974–2000s) brought the number to over 50%. However, since 2006, Freedom House has documented 18 consecutive years of global democratic decline — more countries losing freedom than gaining it.
Country Comparison
Norway
98Consistent #1 on V-Dem Liberal Democracy Index, full press freedom, robust civil liberties, universal suffrage since 1913, highest voter turnout in Scandinavia.
North Korea
2World's most closed society, no press freedom, no civil liberties, no meaningful elections, systematic political repression.
Key Insight
Freedom is the most volatile of the six dimensions — it can be gained and lost within a single generation. The current global trend of democratic backsliding (18 consecutive years of decline as of 2024) represents a significant warning signal for overall civilizational progress.
Sustainability
Sustainable Interaction with Nature
Definition
The Sustainability dimension measures the degree to which human civilization operates within planetary boundaries — the environmental limits within which humanity can safely function. It tracks the impact of human activity on Earth's climate, ecosystems, and natural resources.
Why It Matters
Sustainability is the constraint dimension — the one that determines whether progress in all other dimensions can be maintained over the long term. As Johan Rockström's planetary boundaries framework demonstrates, transgressing Earth's biophysical limits risks destabilizing the environmental conditions that have enabled civilization to flourish over the past 10,000 years. This dimension is unique in showing a predominantly negative trend since the Industrial Revolution.
Key Indicators
CO₂ Concentration
Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration in parts per million (ppm), inverted so that lower concentrations score higher. Uses ice core data for historical values and Mauna Loa measurements from 1958 onward.
Temperature Anomaly
Global mean surface temperature deviation from pre-industrial baseline (1850–1900 average), inverted. Captures the direct consequence of greenhouse gas accumulation.
Forest Coverage
Global forest area as a percentage of total land area. Captures deforestation trends and reforestation efforts. Forests serve as carbon sinks, biodiversity reservoirs, and ecosystem regulators.
Renewable Energy Share
Share of primary energy consumption from renewable sources (solar, wind, hydro, geothermal, modern biomass). Captures the energy transition trajectory. Only meaningfully applicable from ~1960 onward.
Historical Narrative
Sustainability tells a dramatically different story from the other five dimensions. For most of human history, environmental impact was negligible — atmospheric CO₂ remained stable at ~280 ppm for 10,000 years. The Industrial Revolution (1760s onward) changed everything. CO₂ began rising, accelerating sharply after 1950 (the 'Great Acceleration'). Today, at ~425 ppm, CO₂ is at its highest level in at least 800,000 years. Six of the nine planetary boundaries have now been transgressed. Yet there are signs of hope: renewable energy deployment is following an exponential curve similar to the Knowledge dimension, and energy-related CO₂ emissions may have peaked in some developed nations.
Country Comparison
Norway
7299% of electricity from hydropower, ambitious climate policies, significant oil fund reinvestment in green technology. However, still a major fossil fuel exporter, creating a paradox in sustainability measurement.
Qatar
12Highest per-capita CO₂ emissions globally (~35 tonnes/person), near-total fossil fuel dependence, extreme water stress, minimal forest cover.
Key Insight
Sustainability is the only dimension where the overall historical trend is negative. While the pre-industrial world scored ~98 on sustainability, the modern world scores ~36. This creates a fundamental tension at the heart of the CivStat framework: the very processes that drove improvements in welfare, knowledge, and freedom also degraded environmental sustainability. Resolving this tension — maintaining progress while restoring planetary health — is civilization's defining challenge.
Cooperation
International Collaboration & Diplomacy
Definition
The Cooperation dimension measures the extent and depth of collaborative relationships between nations and peoples. It encompasses trade, diplomatic relations, participation in international institutions, and collective action on shared challenges — the 'connective tissue' of the global civilization.
Why It Matters
No single nation can address global challenges alone. Climate change, pandemics, nuclear proliferation, and AI governance all require unprecedented levels of international cooperation. This dimension captures humanity's capacity for collective action — an emergent property of civilization that has grown dramatically since the 19th century but faces growing headwinds from nationalism and geopolitical competition.
Key Indicators
Trade Openness
Total trade (exports + imports) as a percentage of global GDP. Captures economic interdependence and the extent of peaceful commercial exchange between nations.
ODA Percentage
Official Development Assistance as a percentage of donor GNI. Measures wealthy nations' commitment to supporting development in lower-income countries. UN target: 0.7% of GNI.
Treaty Participation
Weighted count of international treaties, conventions, and multilateral agreements in force. Higher weight for universal treaties (e.g., Paris Agreement, NPT) and treaties with compliance mechanisms.
Diplomatic Relations
Density of bilateral diplomatic relationships as a proportion of all possible country pairs. Captures the breadth and depth of formal international engagement.
Historical Narrative
International cooperation is a relatively recent phenomenon in human history. Before the 19th century, relations between distant civilizations were sporadic and often mediated by conflict. The Concert of Europe (1815) introduced the concept of international order. The telegraph (1866) and steamship enabled rapid communication and trade. The League of Nations (1920) and United Nations (1945) institutionalized cooperation. Trade as a share of global GDP grew from ~2% in 1800 to ~60% by 2008. However, globalization is not linear — trade collapsed during both World Wars, and recent trends show increasing fragmentation along geopolitical lines.
Country Comparison
Netherlands
92Major trading nation (trade/GDP ratio >150%), host to ICJ and ICC, ODA exceeds 0.7% target, participant in virtually all major international treaties, headquarters of multiple international organizations.
North Korea
5Minimal trade (heavily sanctioned), no ODA contribution, withdrawn from NPT, limited diplomatic relations, deliberately isolated from international institutions.
Key Insight
Cooperation shows a fascinating pattern of acceleration and fragility. The post-WWII period saw an unprecedented expansion of international institutions and trade networks. But this architecture is now being tested by great power competition, trade wars, and the politicization of international organizations. The Cooperation dimension may be approaching an inflection point.