schden
Schden is a theoretical construct used in discussions of harm assessment to describe latent or systemic damage that accumulates over time while remaining largely unnoticed. In this context, damage is not tied to a single catastrophic event but to a series of small, interdependent effects that erode resilience, legitimacy, or function.
Origin and usage: The term is a neologism that appears in certain English-language scholarly and policy-oriented
Concept and characteristics: Key features of schden include cumulative scope, latent onset, nonlinearity, and under-detection by
Mechanisms: Schemes include underreporting, normalization of risk, adaptive expectations that discount future harm, and misaligned incentives
Contexts and relevance: The concept is used in analyses of public administration, environmental management, digital platforms,
Measurement and critique: Because schden is latent and context-dependent, it challenges standard metrics. Critics argue that
See also: systemic risk, cumulative impact, externality, resilience, governance, damage assessment.