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The Triple Integration Challenge II — Intermediate Course on Political Economy Through a Georgist Catan Lens

Political economy has long struggled with a central puzzle: how to integrate economic efficiency, individual liberty, and social justice without treating them as competing goals.

Most courses teach these values as trade‑offs. This meetup takes a radically different approach—one that is hands‑on, playful, and structurally revealing.

We use a Georgist‑repurposed version of Settlers of Catan as affirming the core teaching tool of the notrs. The game becomes a living model of political‑economic design, where participants experiment with rules, incentives, and institutional choices to discover how all three values can reinforce one another.

🎯 What This Meetup Offers
This is an immersive participatory action‑learning session, not a lecture. You will:

  • Explore how standard Catan encodes land monopoly, scarcity, and zero‑sum dynamics
  • Play with a Georgist‑inspired ruleset where land rents flow to the commons
  • Observe how strategic behaviour shifts when speculation no longer dominates
  • Map how different rule structures affect efficiency, freedom, and fairness
  • Work in groups to prototype institutional tweaks and test them in real time
  • Learn the importance of applying the principles of equality in rights as necessary to social justice
    🧩 The Core Design Challenge
    Participants will take on a simple but profound brief:

Examine a political‑economic system—tested through gameplay—where:

  • productive activity is rewarded (efficiency)
  • players retain meaningful strategic freedom (liberty)
  • community‑created value is distributed fairly (justice)
  • the of sacrificing one value to protect another, we explore how aligned incentives can make all three mutually reinforcing.

🎲 Why Catan?
Because games are micro‑economies analogies.
Catan makes visible what textbooks hide:

  • how land values emerge
  • how monopolies distort behaviour
  • how public revenue can stabilise cooperation
  • how rule changes reshape incentives instantly
  • how institutions are differentiated from natural market forces.

By repurposing the game with Georgist principles, we turn it into a sandbox for institutional imagination.

🧠 How We Learn
The session blends:

  • Interactive gameplay using the modified ruleset
  • Design labs where groups adjust rules and test outcomes
  • Reflective dialogue on what each rule change reveals
  • Connections to real‑world policy in indigenous people's rights, immigration, housing, taxation, public goods, and governance

🌍 Who This Is For

  • People curious about political economy, Georgism, or institutional design
  • Educators seeking participatory teaching tools
  • Strategy gamers who enjoy variants with deeper meaning
  • Policy thinkers, activists, and community organisers
  • Anyone who wants to explore how societies can be both free and fair.

Related topics

Events in Sydney, AU
Continuing Education
Progressive Politics
Economics
Game Theory
Immersive Design

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