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Paperback The Fragility Contract: Why do modern livelihoods feel stable-until they suddenly aren't? Book

ISBN: B0GPD9RT56

ISBN13: 9798248546183

The Fragility Contract: Why do modern livelihoods feel stable-until they suddenly aren't?

Why do modern livelihoods feel stable-until they suddenly aren't?

Most people are told that security comes from participation: a job, a platform, a market, an institution.
As long as income flows and access persists, the system appears reliable.
When it fails, it fails abruptly, asymmetrically, and without meaningful recourse.

The Fragility Contract is a concise systems analysis of that arrangement.
Rather than treating economic insecurity as a personal or moral problem, this book examines it as a design issue.
It shows how modern livelihoods externalize risk, concentrate failure, and rely on soft coercion rather than overt force.
Wages, platforms, and markets do not eliminate fragility-they hide it, delay it, and redirect it downward.

The first part of the book dissects why dependency-based systems appear stable while remaining structurally brittle.
It explores single points of failure, incentive asymmetry, administrative volatility, attention saturation, and the psychological cost of continuous legibility.

The second part introduces autonomy not as ideology or lifestyle, but as infrastructure. By internalizing the physical bases of survival-energy, water, food, and materials-autonomous systems invert the logic of dependency. Markets become optional export layers rather than lifelines. Failure degrades capability instead of terminating it. Stability emerges from design rather than compliance.

The final part examines how institutions respond when leverage weakens. Without resorting to conspiracy or moral judgment, it maps predictable reaction phases: narrative reframing, regulatory thickening, containment, and escalation. These responses arise not from malice, but from incentive misalignment and the breakdown of predictive models.

Crucially, the book does not advocate confrontation. It shows why quiet, infrastructural autonomy-withdrawal without protest-tends to persist where loud resistance provokes escalation. Needing less often proves more effective than demanding change.

Written with clinical restraint and grounded in mechanics rather than ideology, The Fragility Contract is neither a manifesto nor a survival guide. It is a compact examination of how dependency fails, how autonomy works, and why control over one's base layers changes everything.

For readers interested in systems thinking, economic resilience, and the limits of leverage in an increasingly unstable world.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: New

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