Essays
PATRIARGH® publishes essays on power, institutions, and the psychology of human behavior.
This body of work examines how authority is constructed, how systems influence behavior, and what it means to act with clarity and integrity within them.
Current Series
The Coercive Control Series
A structural analysis of power: how it operates, how it conceals itself, and how individuals and institutions become complicit in its enforcement.
The Humanism Series
A philosophical counterpoint; exploring dignity, responsibility, moral courage, and the conditions required to rebuild trust and human-centered systems.
Coming Soon
Field Notes, an editorial column sharing, real-time observations on power as it appears in everyday life.
These pieces are less formal than the core series, but no less precise:
Commentary on behavior, leadership, culture, and the subtle dynamics that shape relationships, organizations, and society.
Where the series establish the framework,
Field Notes documents the world as it is.
Normalization and Social Control
Control rarely feels like control. This essay explores how systems normalize behavior over time, making restriction, conformity, and silence feel ordinary.
The Last Decent Person
Integrity rarely disappears all at once; it erodes through quiet accommodation. This essay explores what happens when ethical behavior becomes rare, and the cost of refusing to conform.
The Quiet Power of Moral Courage
Moral courage rarely looks dramatic. More often, it takes the form of small refusals that disrupt complicity, and quietly destabilize corrupt systems from within.
