🇺🇸 United States — GEF Country Profile

Gross Empathic Function (GEF) Index · Country Atlas

GEF Score 2.0 / 5
Stage Classification Transitional (1.6–2.0) — Fear–Anger System

The United States combines high material development and emotional visibility with deep structural trauma, political polarization, and punitive systems that keep the overall emotional civilization in a transitional zone between Stage 1 (Fear–Dependency) and Stage 2 (Anger–Detachment).

Quick Facts

  • Region: Americas (North America)
  • Population: ~330+ million (context only; not used in scoring)
  • Overall GEF pattern: Strong local islands of empathic innovation inside a structurally punitive, polarized macro-system.
  • Dominant emotional climate: High anxiety, anger, and mistrust across political, racial, and class lines, with powerful counter-movements for justice and healing.

GEF Indicator Profile (20 Indicators · 0–5 scale)

Scores are based on 20 indicators grouped into broad domains (Safety, Justice, Governance, Education/Youth, and Collective Trauma & Culture). Higher scores indicate more consistent empathic functioning and trauma-informed systems.

# Indicator Score Domain
1 Public physical safety 2 Safety
2 Emotional safety in daily life 2 Safety
3 Protection of vulnerable groups 3 Safety
4 Conflict style (dialogue vs humiliation) 2 Justice & Conflict
5 Leadership emotional regulation & accountability 2 Governance
6 Restorative vs punitive justice 1 Justice & Conflict
7 Dignity in offender treatment 1 Justice & Conflict
8 Collective trauma integration 2 Collective Trauma
9 Trust in institutions 2 Governance
10 Empathic policymaking 2 Governance
11 Emotional literacy in schools 2 Education & Youth
12 Youth voice 2 Education & Youth
13 Parenting support systems 2 Families & Parenting
14 Workplace emotional safety 3 Work & Organizations
15 Inequality & economic safety 1 Economic Safety
16 Value of elders/vulnerable 2 Families & Culture
17 Attitudes toward diversity 3 Inclusion & Diversity
18 Historical trauma acknowledgment 2 Collective Trauma
19 Media humanization vs dehumanization 1 Media & Culture
20 Developmental direction (toward or away from empathy) 2 Overall Direction

Interpretation

Overall emotional structure

The United States operates as a highly stratified emotional system. At the micro level, many families, communities, schools, and clinics embody Stage 3–4 qualities: active concern for harm, strong peer support, trauma-informed practice, and a culture of speaking up. At the macro level, however, the country remains dominated by fear, anger, polarization, and punitive reflexes.

High rates of gun violence, mass incarceration, racialized policing, and economic inequality keep public safety and trust scores low, despite enormous financial and technological resources. Public debate is often framed in adversarial, humiliating, or tribal terms, reducing the capacity for reflective dialogue across differences.

Strengths

  • Vibrant civil society and activism: Strong grassroots movements for racial justice, trauma awareness, restorative practices, and mental health advocacy.
  • Innovation in therapy, research, and education: Many universities, clinics, and community programs operate at Stage 4–5 in terms of emotional literacy and trauma-informed care.
  • Legal rights and free speech: Robust protections for expression and organizing allow marginalized groups to speak, protest, and build new empathic institutions.
  • Cultural creativity: Art, film, music, and literature often confront trauma, injustice, and identity conflicts directly, offering pathways for individual insight.

Vulnerabilities

  • Punitive justice and mass incarceration: Reliance on harsh punishment, long sentences, and dehumanizing prison conditions keeps indicators for justice and dignity very low.
  • Structural inequality: Extreme disparities in income, healthcare, housing, and education undermine feelings of safety and belonging, especially for marginalized groups.
  • Polarized media ecosystem: Sensational and divisive media often amplify fear, outrage, and dehumanization rather than empathy and complexity.
  • Unintegrated historical trauma: Legacies of slavery, colonization of Native peoples, and ongoing racial injustice remain only partially acknowledged and unevenly integrated into collective consciousness.
  • Leadership emotional regulation: Political and media leaders frequently model shame-based attacks, denial, and splitting rather than accountable, emotionally regulated dialogue.

Developmental Trajectory

The United States is likely to oscillate between Stage 2 and transitional levels for the foreseeable future. Periods of constructive reform and empathic awakening (e.g., civil rights movements, restorative justice experiments, trauma-informed schools) often alternate with backlashes, polarization, and renewed punitive control.

Moving toward Stage 3 (Guilt–Reparation) and beyond would require:

  • Deep investment in early childhood safety, attachment, and parenting support.
  • Structural reforms to shift from a punishment-first justice system to one that incorporates restorative and rehabilitative approaches.
  • Sustained efforts to acknowledge and work through historical trauma, particularly around race, indigeneity, and systemic violence.
  • Strengthening media and educational systems that teach emotional literacy, critical thinking, and perspective-taking across political and cultural lines.
  • Encouraging emotionally regulated, accountable leadership at all levels of society, from local institutions to national office.

Without such shifts, the emotional ecosystem is at risk of chronic Stage 2 dynamics: anger, scapegoating, zero-sum thinking, and recurring cycles of fear and backlash. At the same time, the presence of strong Stage 3–4 “islands” suggests that the potential for higher-stage development is already present, if these islands can be scaled and protected.

Notes & Limitations

  • The GEF score is a developmental estimate, not a moral verdict or a final truth.
  • Within any country, there are large regional and subcultural differences (for example, some communities function near Stage 4–5 while others remain at Stage 1–2).
  • Data sources include public reports, cross-national indices, research literature, and psycho-cultural analysis, and will be refined as new evidence and feedback emerge.
  • The purpose of the GEF Atlas is to support reflection and healing, not to stigmatize nations. Lower scores show where empathic infrastructure is most needed.

Share Your Reflections

This GEF profile is a developmental estimate based on psycho-cultural analysis. If you live in this country or have insight, we invite you to share comments below. Respectful, empathic dialogue is encouraged.