CONCEPT
Sub-Politics
Consequential power exercised in spaces outside formal democratic governance—corporate design meetings, research labs—where decisions reshape millions of lives without democratic process.
Sub-politics names the migration of consequential decision-making from formal political institutions to the informal spaces of economic, technological, and scientific activity. The decisions that most profoundly shape people's lives—which technologies to develop, which chemicals to synthesize, which products to deploy, which risks to externalize—are not made by elected officials subject to democratic accountability. They are made by engineers, managers, scientists, and entrepreneurs operating within institutions whose decision-making processes are internal, proprietary, and accountable to shareholders rather than to the publics affected by their choices. Sub-politics is not conspiracy—it is a structural feature of societies in which the pace and complexity of technological development outstrip the capacity of formal political institutions to understand, evaluate, and govern it.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Beck developed the concept in the 1990s to describe a phenomenon he observed across advanced industrial societies: the most important political decisions were being made in spaces that were not recognized as political. A pharmaceutical company's decision about which drugs to develop and at what price. A telecommunications firm's decision about network architecture and