Collective organization in matter plays a significant role in its expressed
physical properties. Typically, it is detected via an order parameter, appropriately
defined for each given system's observed emergent patterns. Recent developments in
information theory, however, suggest quantifying collective organization in a system- and
phenomenon-agnostic way: decompose the system's thermodynamic entropy density into a
localized entropy, that solely contained in the dynamics at a single location, and a bound
entropy, that stored in space as domains, clusters, excitations, or other emergent
structures. We compute this decomposition and related quantities explicitly for the
nearest-neighbor Ising model on the 1D chain, the Bethe lattice with coordination number
k=3, and the 2D square lattice, illustrating its generality and the functional insights it
gives near and away from phase transitions. In particular, we consider the roles that
different spin motifs play (in cluster bulk, cluster edges, and the like) and how these
affect the dependencies between spins.