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· The Epoch Framework · Print Edition ·

An Exhaustive Framework for Evaluating Societal Livability

30 dimensions · 122 sub-categories · 452 atomic scoring points

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How to read this framework

This is a tool for evaluating how well a society works for the humans (and non-humans) living in it — not a taxonomy of societal models (capitalism vs. socialism, etc.). The goal is to give a society a multi-dimensional fingerprint rather than a single score.

The dimension count isn't fixed; it's whatever exhaustiveness requires. This revision grew the original 25 to 30 by splitting conflated concepts (Governance → Democratic + Administrative Quality; Environment → Environmental Quality + Ecological Stewardship), merging redundant ones (Demographics + Life-Stage), folding thin ones (Play/Recreation into Lifestyle; Religion into Culture + Rights), and adding six genuinely missing dimensions (Legal System Architecture, Language, Aesthetic & Built Environment, Sexual & Reproductive Life, Food System, Financial System).

Meta-rules (apply to every atomic point below)

  1. Score each point twice: de-jure and de-facto. The law on paper and the reality on the ground. A huge gap between the two is itself a signal.
  2. Score by demographic slice where relevant. National averages hide whether the society works well for women, migrants, rural residents, minorities, etc.
  3. Capture trajectory, not just snapshot. Each point should also carry a direction (improving / stagnant / degrading over the last 5 years).
  4. Acknowledge tradeoffs. Some dimensions are in tension (freedom ↔ safety, growth ↔ sustainability, individualism ↔ cohesion, present welfare ↔ future welfare). A high score everywhere simultaneously is usually impossible and sometimes incoherent.
  5. Tier by importance. Not all 452 points are equal. Suggested tiers: critical (survival & basic dignity), important (quality of life & opportunity), supporting (refinement & texture).

1Economic Opportunity

Plenty

1.1 Income & Wealth

1.2 Jobs & Employment

1.3 Business & Entrepreneurship

1.4 Mobility & Security


2Democratic Quality

Power

2.1 Electoral Process

2.2 Representation

2.3 Civic Participation

2.4 Democratic Accountability


3Administrative Quality

Power

3.1 State Capacity

3.2 Bureaucratic Efficiency

3.3 Anti-Corruption & Transparency

3.4 Policy Coherence


4.1 Foundation & Type

4.2 Access to Justice

4.3 Criminal Justice

4.4 Efficacy & Fairness


5Freedom & Rights

Liberty

5.1 Civil & Political Liberties

5.2 Personal Autonomy

5.3 Digital Freedom

5.4 Protection Regimes


6Safety & Stability

Liberty

6.1 Crime

6.2 Institutional Safety

6.3 Political & Macro Stability

6.4 Everyday Hazards


7Health & Wellbeing

Health

7.1 Access

7.2 Quality & Affordability

7.3 Population Health

7.4 Mental Health

7.5 Preventive & Public Health


8Education & Skill Access

Knowledge

8.1 Foundation

8.2 Higher Education & Research

8.3 Skill Development

8.4 Quality & Content


9Infrastructure & Mobility

Structural

9.1 Transport

9.2 Urban & Utilities

9.3 Pedestrian & Accessibility

9.4 Maintenance & Future-Readiness


10Technological Integration

Knowledge

10.1 Digital Infrastructure

10.2 Digital Economy & Governance

10.3 Innovation

10.4 Tech Resilience & Frontier


11Environmental Quality (for humans, now)

Health

What the air, water, and sensory environment are actually like to live in today.

11.1 Air

11.2 Water

11.3 Sensory Environment

11.4 Everyday Exposure


12Ecological Stewardship

Legacy

What the society is doing to/for non-human life and future generations.

12.1 Climate

12.2 Resource Stewardship

12.3 Ecological Balance

12.4 Enforcement & Planning


13Social Equality

Harmony

13.1 Economic Equality

13.2 Demographic Equality

13.3 Identity Inclusion

13.4 Access Equality


14Lifestyle & Living Experience

Beauty

14.1 Cost & Affordability

14.2 Work-Life Balance

14.3 Living Environment

14.4 Social & Leisure

14.5 Play, Sport & Recreation


15Cultural & Value Alignment

Harmony

15.1 Social Norms

15.2 Openness

15.3 Communication & Behavior

15.4 Public Temperament

15.5 Religion in Public Life


16Demographic & Life-Stage Dynamics

Structural

16.1 Population Dynamics

16.2 Migration

16.3 Urbanization & Households

16.4 Early Adulthood

16.5 Family Formation

16.6 Mid-Life & Later Life


17Social Trust & Cohesion

Harmony

17.1 Interpersonal Trust

17.2 Institutional Trust

17.3 Civic Fabric

17.4 Polarization


18Meaning, Purpose & Psychological Wealth

Harmony

18.1 Subjective Wellbeing

18.2 Purpose & Agency

18.3 Social Connection

18.4 Flourishing


19Media & Information Ecosystem

Knowledge

19.1 Media Structure

19.2 Media Freedom & Safety

19.3 Information Quality

19.4 Public Capacity


20Geopolitical Position

Structural

20.1 Global Standing

20.2 Security Posture

20.3 Economic Geopolitics

20.4 Conflict Exposure


21Resilience & Antifragility

Legacy

21.1 Self-Sufficiency

21.2 Buffers & Reserves

21.3 Shock Recovery

21.4 Adaptive Capacity


22Animal Welfare & Multi-Species Considerations

Legacy

22.1 Domestic & Farmed Animals

22.2 Wildlife

22.3 Human-Animal Ecosystem

22.4 Ethics & Advocacy


23Death, Mourning & Legacy Systems

Legacy

23.1 End-of-Life Care

23.2 Transition Logistics

23.3 Inheritance & Legacy


24Children & Youth-Specific Experience

Beauty

24.1 Child Environment

24.2 Early-Life Infrastructure

24.3 Youth Development

24.4 Digital Childhood


25Societal Observability & Measurement Capacity

Legacy

25.1 Statistical Infrastructure

25.2 Open Data & Transparency

25.3 What Gets Measured


26Language & Linguistic Environment

Harmony

26.1 Official Status & Access

26.2 Linguistic Equity

26.3 Preservation & Vitality


27Aesthetic & Built Environment

Beauty

27.1 Urban Design

27.2 Public Art & Culture

27.3 Sensory Quality of Place


28Sexual & Reproductive Life

Beauty

28.1 Reproductive Health

28.2 Sexual Education & Health

28.3 Sexual Autonomy & Safety

28.4 Sexual Minorities


29Food System

Plenty

29.1 Food Security

29.2 Food Quality & Safety

29.3 Food Culture & Diversity

29.4 Agricultural & Production Ethics


30Financial System & Personal Finance

Plenty

30.1 Banking & Access

30.2 Credit & Investment

30.3 Consumer Protection

30.4 Financial Literacy


Using this framework

For country comparison: Score each atomic point 1–10 (de-jure and de-facto), weight by tier, and produce a 30-dimension radar. The shape of the radar matters more than a single aggregated number — two countries can have identical composite scores and be radically different places to live.

For policy prioritization: Identify dimensions where your society scores weakest relative to peers, then drill into sub-categories to find leverage points. High-leverage points tend to be ones where de-jure and de-facto scores diverge most — the law exists but isn't working.

For personal relocation decisions: Weight dimensions by your own life stage and values. Early-career person cares more about 1, 8, 14. Young family weights 7, 14, 24, 28, 29. Retiree weights 7, 14, 16.6, 23. Activist weights 2, 5, 19. Your ideal society is different from a demographer's.

Known limits of this framework:

True exhaustiveness is unreachable — someone can always add a dimension. This aims to cover the serious blind spots in standard livability indices (HDI, WEF, Mercer, Numbeo, EIU Liveability, World Happiness Report, SDG Index) while staying usable.