As the formal economy that shaped the last two centuries begins to contract, many Canadians are quietly shifting toward local solutions. This isn’t driven by nostalgia or a rejection of modernity. It’s a pragmatic recognition: small-scale systems often perform better when large ones start to falter.
The core advantage of localism lies in preserving feedback. It keeps decisions close to their consequences and anchors activity in observable reality. In a contracting world, small scale isn’t optional—it’s structurally superior for resilience, accountability, and honest adaptation.

How Scale Actually Works
In localism, scale isn’t just a buzzword; it’s the physical and social size at which decisions are made. It answers a basic question: How big is the system doing the deciding?
Localism doesn’t insist that “small is always better.” Rather, it makes a precise claim: many activities have been pushed far beyond their appropriate scale. This shift has replaced practical judgment with bureaucracy and systemic resilience with narrow efficiency.
Small Scale (The Localist Edge)
- Proximity: Decisions are made where their effects are felt.
- Knowledge: Producers and users often know one another personally.
- Speed: Feedback arrives quickly; mistakes are visible and corrected before they compound.
- Examples: Food grown and sold within a region; housing shaped by local materials; care networks built on neighborhood trust.
Large Scale (The Institutional Trap)
- Distance: Decisions are made far from consequences.
- Rules: Systems depend on formal procedures, centralized targets, and metrics.
- Cascades: Failures aren’t contained—they ripple across the entire system.
- Examples: National planning regulations that ignore regional climate; centralized food supply chains vulnerable to distant disruptions.
Why Small Systems Stay Honest
This structural difference becomes critical as formal systems weaken. Large organizations don’t merely become less efficient—they become structurally prone to losing touch with reality.

The reason isn’t individual dishonesty; it’s the effect of scale on feedback.
The “Ostrom” Factor
The late Elinor Ostrom’s research on common-pool resources (fisheries, irrigation, grazing lands) proved this. In thousands of cases, small, self-governing groups consistently outperformed centralized management. They didn’t function because the people were unusually virtuous—they functioned because dishonesty was visible, costly, and immediately damaging.
The Structural Precondition for Adaptation
As discretionary spending contracts and formal institutions struggle to respond, large systems grow more fragile. They require ever-greater simplification to function, and simplification slides into distortion. Targets supplant reality; “invented facts” become the lubricant to keep the machine running.
Local systems, by contrast, don’t “scale up”—and that’s precisely their strength. Their limited size keeps them tethered to observation and personal responsibility.
Localism isn’t a nostalgic retreat. In an era of strained housing, volatile energy prices, and brittle supply chains, it is the structural precondition for accurate description and effective adaptation. It is how we stay connected to reality when the “official” version of reality no longer makes sense.
Join the Conversation
Where in your own life or community do you see small-scale arrangements already outperforming distant ones? What practical steps could help shift more of our everyday needs toward an appropriate, local scale?
I’d love to hear your experiences and thoughts in the comments.
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