Category:Global Governance: Difference between revisions

From P2P Foundation
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(36 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
* Crucial: on the need for a bioregional reorganization of the world order:
** [[Planetary Cooperation for Regional Self-Organization]]. James Quilligan.
** The P2P Foundation: [[Cosmo-Localism]]
* We are sympathetic to policy proposals such as those by
**Joseph Cederwall: '''A [[Global New Deal For The Commons]]''' [https://thedig.nz/editorial/hope-for-nature-a-new-deal-for-the-commons/?]
**Jean-Christophe Duval: The [[Neguentropic Money International Monetary System - NEMO IMS]], with new commons-based institutions such as: The [[NEMO Green DTS]]‎ and the [[GAIA Economic Symposium]]: '''"NEMO IMS recommends the creation of new institutions that would issue debt-free money as income in return for commons regeneration activities."'''
* [[Peter Pogany]], in the landmark book [[Rethinking the World]] calls for a new global system (Global System 3) that adds a new layer of binding multilateralism, which protects our compact with nature through respect for planetary boundaries. See the prototyping being done by the [[R3.0]] project, i.e. the [[Global Thresholds and Allocations Council]]
* For our own vision in the P2P Foundation: '''[[Michel Bauwens on the Emerging Commons-Centric Planetary Civilization]]''' [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yzcb8piOQU4&feature=youtu.be&t=187s]




Line 5: Line 16:
* Key concepts [http://p2pfoundation.net/Toward_a_New_Multilateralism_of_the_Global_Commons] for a [[Global Common Wealth]]:
* Key concepts [http://p2pfoundation.net/Toward_a_New_Multilateralism_of_the_Global_Commons] for a [[Global Common Wealth]]:


[[World History as a Thermodynamic Process]] and the coming of a Third Global World System. Peter Pogany.
[[World History as a Thermodynamic Process]] and the coming of a Third Global World System]]. Peter Pogany.


Introduction by James Quilligan: [[Beyond State Capitalism]]: The Commons Economy in our Lifetimes. [http://www.onthecommons.org/beyond-state-capitalism]
Introduction by James Quilligan: [[Beyond State Capitalism]]: The Commons Economy in our Lifetimes. [http://www.onthecommons.org/beyond-state-capitalism]
See also:


#A framework for [[Local To Global Public Finance]]
#A framework for [[Local To Global Public Finance]]
Line 16: Line 30:
#[[Mark Whitaker]]'s book, [[Toward a Bioregional State]], proposes a global [[Bioregional Democracy]] based on [[Civic Democratic Institutions]] and a [[Commodity Ecology]]
#[[Mark Whitaker]]'s book, [[Toward a Bioregional State]], proposes a global [[Bioregional Democracy]] based on [[Civic Democratic Institutions]] and a [[Commodity Ecology]]


=Citations=


==Jose Ramos on [[Cosmo-Localism]]==
 
=[[Sacha Pignot on the Three Levels of the Cosmo-Local Fractal Sovereignty Stack]]=
 
 
Sacha Pignot identifies three levels of [[Fractal Sovereignty]]:
 
 
===[[Hyper-Localism]] (micro level)===
 
"The Connected Foundation:
 
 
Hyper-localism in fractal sovereignty isn’t isolation—it’s creating resilient foundation layers that can participate meaningfully in larger networks.
 
 
This includes:
 
- Household production: Food preservation, craft production, repair culture, energy generation
 
- Community workshops: Shared tools, skill exchanges, local fabrication capabilities
 
- Neighborhood resource sharing: Tool libraries, community kitchens, local currency systems
 
- Immediate ecosystem management: Watershed stewardship, local food systems, micro-grids
 
 
The key innovation: these systems maintain full autonomy over production processes and resource allocation while accessing global knowledge networks when beneficial. A community workshop using locally sourced wood can access global design innovations while maintaining control over working conditions.
 
 
===[[Bioregionalism]] (meso level)===
 
The Ecological Integration level:
 
"Bioregionalism organizes human activity along ecological boundaries rather than political ones. Watersheds, climate zones, ecosystems, and natural resource patterns define the scale of coordination, creating economic systems that work with ecological processes rather than against them.
 
In fractal sovereignty, bioregions function as meso-scale networks connecting multiple hyper-local communities while respecting ecological carrying capacity. Different communities might specialize—agriculture, manufacturing, knowledge work—while sharing resources and coordinating to maintain ecological balance.
 
Bioregional coordination operates through network dynamics rather than hierarchical control. Communities share information about resource availability, ecological conditions, production capacity, and needs through distributed networks while maintaining local autonomy."
 
 
===[[Cosmo-Localism]] (macro level)===
 
The Global Knowledge, Local Control level:
 
Unlike linear globalism creating disconnected extremities, cosmo-localism follows an ouroboros pattern—a cycle where global knowledge flows back to enhance local capacity, which in turn contributes to global knowledge.
 
This creates a regenerative loop rather than extractive pipeline: local innovations get documented and shared globally, global knowledge gets adapted to local conditions, and the cycle continues with each iteration building capacity at all scales."
 
(https://soushi888.substack.com/p/beyond-local-vs-global)
 
=Quotes=
 
 
==Short Quotes ==
 
=== We need a scalable, networked form of social cohesion ===
 
"Crude forms of identity are emerging to provide social cohesion as national identity melts away. We need a scalable, networked form of social cohesion to replace those crude forms. That requires finding and reinforcing networks of consensus."
 
- John Robb (fb, 2020)
 
 
=== G. Kallis on 'When Autonomy becomes Heteronomy' ===
 
“Self-limitation requires institutions at higher levels to secure the endurance of agreed limits.” : “The setting of limits is then partly a problem of global, collective action: can we set up the higher-level international institutions that can control, say, carbon emissions or aggression or competition, and let nations and lower-level polities set up their own limits?”
 
(https://docs.google.com/document/d/19EfFqpI6H-wDH379qG0tFkMpgTKphV5tVCUcYycyT3M/edit)
 
 
== Long Quotes ==
 
 
===The advent of hyper-empowered networks in a quadriformist age===
 
'''1.'''
 
"Societies have relied across the ages on four cardinal forms of organization: kinship-oriented tribes, hierarchical institutions, competitive markets, and collaborative networks. These forms have co-existed since people first began to assemble into societies — there was always someone doing some activity using one or more of those basic forms. But each has emerged and taken hold as a major form of organization, governance, and evolution in a different historical era. Tribes were first millennia ago (with civil society becoming its modern manifestation); institutions developed millennia later (e.g., states, armies); then centuries later came market systems for growing our economies — hence modern societies with their three major realms.
 
“If that were the end of the story, our prospects for evolving still more complex societies would be nearing an evolutionary cul-de-sac (“the end of history”). Notice, however, that the network form is only now coming into its own, starting a few decades ago. Network forms have been around, in use, for millennia. But they have lacked the right kind of information and communications technology to enable them to take hold and spread. Each preceding form emerged, in turn, because an enabling information technology revolution occurred at the time — i.e., speech and storytelling for tribes, writing and printing for institutions, telegraphy and telephony for markets. The ongoing digital information technology revolution is finally energizing the network form, enabling it to compete with the other forms and address problems they aren’t good at resolving."
 
- David Ronfeldt [https://davidronfeldt.substack.com/p/looking-for-a-better-ideology-quadriformism-34f]
 
 
'''2.'''
 
David Ronfeldt:
 
"“We currently live in an advanced modern society that has a triform design — meaning it has three major realms: civil society, government, and an economy, variously arranged and each relying on its own form organization. This triform design emerged several centuries ago. It still holds sway today.
 
“Indeed, nearly all of today’s ideological isms — capitalism, liberalism, conservatism, progressivism, and populism, as well as trendier anarcho-capitalism, neo-libertarianism, neo-monarchism, accelerationism, national conservatism, techno-humanism, techno-colonialism, cosmo-localism, etc. — are triform in nature. They address how civil-society, government, and/or the economy should be shaped, and how their actors are supposed to think and behave. All of today’s politicians are, at best, triformists.
 
“But triform societies are now nearing their end. Because of growing social complexities and complications, they have nearly exhausted their capabilities as designs that can address and resolve all they need to.
 
“Quadriformism is where future evolution is headed — a distinct fourth realm will emerge and take shape in the decades ahead, absorbing particular kinds of actors and activities that the current three realms are no longer able to handle well. There are reasons to project that this next new realm will consist largely of health, education, welfare, and environmental actors and activities — matters that are about care, broadly defined, rather than identity, power, or profit. These care-centric actors and activities will move (and be moved) into this new realm, which will be as distinct and independent in design as the current three realms are from each other.
 
“This evolution from triform to quadriform designs will radically redefine the nature of societies as a whole, and improve the performance capabilities of all four realms. New philosophies and ideologies will arise.”
 
(https://davidronfeldt.substack.com/p/looking-for-a-better-ideology-quadriformism-34f)
 
 
 
=== The Post-Westphalian Planetary Order of Planetary Cooperation ===
 
Cosmo-Local Bioregionalism facilited by Partner States:
 
"Nearly five hundred years ago, the Treaty of Westphalia applied the ancient system of core and periphery to a governance structure, which later evolved into sovereign international law. But '''managing the real wealth of resources according to their energy potential has never been possible in a core-periphery regime'''. Today, the planet’s steady rise in temperatures, extreme weather, and declines in net energy require a system of logistic growth to maintain the sustainable yield of its habitats, for which few leaders are now prepared (Brown 2003, 131--50). If, as in the past, a core like China/Russia or America/Europe were to establish control of the world’s net energy by exploiting their periphery endowed with cheap and plentiful sources of energy, the newly arrived hegemon will immediately encounter the challenges of declining resources, food and water rationing, roaming populations, and overwhelming dissent. The system of core-periphery is decaying, and any attempt to recreate the historical mismatch between hegemon and energy will bring on diminishing returns and autocratic shambles. The next core power would destroy its own capacities in taking on the role of planetary administrator for a new ecological, cultural, social, political, and economic order under daunting emergency conditions."
 
- James Quilligan [https://online.ucpress.edu/gp/article/5/1/122343/203074/Who-Will-Pay-Back-the-Earth-Revaluing-Net-Energy]
 
 
 
=== Peter Pogany on the Transition towards a Third Thermo-Dynamically Stable World System ===
 
"His theory predicts that global society is drifting toward a new form of self-organization that will recognize limits to demographic-economic expansion – but only after we go through a new chaotic transition that will start sometime between now and the 2030s:
 
"History has recorded two distinct global systems thus far: “laissez faire/metal money,” which spanned most of the 19th century and lasted until the outbreak of World War I, and “mixed economy/weak multilateralism,” which began after 1945 and exists today. The period between the two systems, 1914-1945, was a chaotic transition. This evolutionary pulsation is well known to students of thermodynamics. It corresponds to the behavior of expanding and complexifying material systems.
 
The exhaustion of oil and other natural resources is pushing the world toward a third global system that may be called “two-level economy/strong multilateralism.” It will be impossible to get there without a new chaotic transition. No repeated warnings, academic advice, moral advocacy, inspired reforms, or political leadership can provide a shortcut around it. But if it took “1914-1945″ to make a relatively minor adjustment in the global order, what will it take to make a major one?”
 
- Peter Pogany [https://integralpermaculture.wordpress.com/peter-pogany/?] (via Dave McLeod)
 
 
=== DAO's as Seeds of [[Distributed Social Governance in a Viscous Society]] ===
 
"Seeing the global society in terms of strict dichotomy of “disorder versus structure/control” is counter-productive for understanding and governing it. Both ends of this dichotomy are undesirable: disorder is simply not a viable solution for society, while stable structures are not sustainable and even harmful due to the increasing social complexity. '''We therefore propose to approach society in terms of a fine balance of ever adapting temporary structures in otherwise fluid whole — ''a 'viscous' system''.'''" ...
"What we propose with the image of A World of Views and the Living Cognitive Society is '''the shift of emphasis from the structures and institutions to the very process of creation, adaptation and dissolution of social subsystems at all scales of the global society'''. Furthermore, the naturally distributed nature of the process – meaning '''the absence of central body or ‘trusted party’ governing it – should be embraced, rather than fought''' with establishing global institutions or ‘world governments’ as, we maintain, no stable structure would be able to outweigh the factors of social complexity driving the society towards increasing fluidity."
 
- Viktoras Veitas and David Weinbaum [https://isidl.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/E4629-ISIDL.pdf]
 
 
=== Nick Dyer-Witheford on Three Global Solution Tribes ===
 
"The conjuncture requires an analysis that comprehends not just at the World Trade Organization and the Zapatistas, but also Al Quaeda (not to mention all the Christian, Hindu, Judaic theocratic fundamentalisms).
 
Sketching in the ashes of a global war scenario, I propose a triangulation between three points:
 
a) The logic of neoliberal capitalism. I call this the logic of the World Market. It interpellates a planet of market subjects: consumers.
 
b) The logic of exclusionary ethno-nationalist-religious movements. I call this the logic of Fundamentalist Reaction. It addresses a planet lethally divided amongst chosen peoples.
 
c) The logic of collective creativity and welfare proposed by the counter-globalization movements. I call this the logic of Species Beings. It speaks to a planet of commoners. A whole series of molecular energies are currently being attracted, apportioned and annihilated between these three molar aggregates."
 
- Nick Dyer-Witheford [http://www.commoner.org.uk/11witheford.pdf]
 
 
=== Jose Ramos on [[Cosmo-Localism]] ===


"[[Cosmo-Localization]] '''describes the dynamic potentials of the globally distributed knowledge commons in conjunction with emerging capacity for localized production of value'''. The imperative to create economically and ecologically resilient communities is driving initiatives for ‘re-localization’. Yet, such efforts for re-localization need to be put in the context of new technologies, national policy, transnational knowledge regimes and the wider global knowledge commons."  
"[[Cosmo-Localization]] '''describes the dynamic potentials of the globally distributed knowledge commons in conjunction with emerging capacity for localized production of value'''. The imperative to create economically and ecologically resilient communities is driving initiatives for ‘re-localization’. Yet, such efforts for re-localization need to be put in the context of new technologies, national policy, transnational knowledge regimes and the wider global knowledge commons."  
Line 24: Line 182:
- Jose Ramos [http://actionforesight.net/cosmo-localization/]
- Jose Ramos [http://actionforesight.net/cosmo-localization/]


==A.J. Toynbee on the role of Small Scale within Big Scale==
 
=== A.J. Toynbee on the role of Small Scale within Big Scale ===


“The present day global set of sovereign states is not capable of keeping peace, and it is not capable of saving the biosphere’s non-replaceable natural resources. What has been needed for the last 5,000 years, has become technologically feasible in the last 100, but not yet politically, is a global body politic composed of cells on the scale of the Neolithic-Age village community - a scale on which participants could be personally acquainted with each other, while each of them would also be a citizen of the world state.”                                                                                       
“The present day global set of sovereign states is not capable of keeping peace, and it is not capable of saving the biosphere’s non-replaceable natural resources. What has been needed for the last 5,000 years, has become technologically feasible in the last 100, but not yet politically, is a global body politic composed of cells on the scale of the Neolithic-Age village community - a scale on which participants could be personally acquainted with each other, while each of them would also be a citizen of the world state.”                                                                                       
Line 30: Line 189:
- A.J. Toynbee [https://medium.com/p/6438d463bcc2]
- A.J. Toynbee [https://medium.com/p/6438d463bcc2]


==Brian Holmes on how market and state failure can lead to a commons resurgence at the global scale==
 
=== Brian Holmes on how market and state failure can lead to a commons resurgence at the global scale ===


"Minqi Li's claim is that too many formerly peripheral countries -- especially the giants, India and China -- have moved into the position of what the world systems theorists call "semi-peripheral" countries, supplying mid-range or partially elaborated products to the central, high-technology producers. The result is a declining pool of people to exploit, both in terms of labor and resources, and in terms of defenseless markets that must necessarily buy products from the center. When large percentages of the world population have access to at least mid-level producer technology, capital can no longer accumulate at the former centers, whose power declines. The current state of affairs in Western Europe and the US/Canada seems to bear this thesis out.
"Minqi Li's claim is that too many formerly peripheral countries -- especially the giants, India and China -- have moved into the position of what the world systems theorists call "semi-peripheral" countries, supplying mid-range or partially elaborated products to the central, high-technology producers. The result is a declining pool of people to exploit, both in terms of labor and resources, and in terms of defenseless markets that must necessarily buy products from the center. When large percentages of the world population have access to at least mid-level producer technology, capital can no longer accumulate at the former centers, whose power declines. The current state of affairs in Western Europe and the US/Canada seems to bear this thesis out.
Line 38: Line 198:
- Brian Holmes, August 2014
- Brian Holmes, August 2014


==[[Engage Global, Test Local, Spread Viral]]==
 
=== [[Engage Global, Test Local, Spread Viral]] ===


John Boik:
John Boik:
Line 52: Line 213:
Cities, big and small, are the legs upon which all national systems rest. Already cities and their communities are hubs for innovation. With some further encouragement and support, and the right tools and programs, they could become more resilient and robust, and bigger heroes in the coming great transition." (https://medium.com/@JohnBoik/an-economy-of-meaning-or-bust-2aa46457b649#.1i09j8lv3)
Cities, big and small, are the legs upon which all national systems rest. Already cities and their communities are hubs for innovation. With some further encouragement and support, and the right tools and programs, they could become more resilient and robust, and bigger heroes in the coming great transition." (https://medium.com/@JohnBoik/an-economy-of-meaning-or-bust-2aa46457b649#.1i09j8lv3)


==Carl Schmitt on how a world state based on reciprocity would overcome perpetual war==
 
=== Carl Schmitt on how a world state based on reciprocity would overcome perpetual war ===


"Were a world state to embrace the entire globe and humanity, then it
"Were a world state to embrace the entire globe and humanity, then it
would be no political entity and could only loosely be called a state. If,
would be no political entity and could only loosely be called a state. If,
in fact, all humanity and the entire world were to become a unifi ed
in fact, all humanity and the entire world were to become a unified
entity . . . [and should] that interest group also want to become cultural,
entity . . . [and should] that interest group also want to become cultural,
ideological, or otherwise more ambitious, and yet remain strictly nonpolitical, then it would be a neutral consumer or producer co- operative moving between the poles of ethics and economics. It would know neither
ideological, or otherwise more ambitious, and yet remain strictly nonpolitical, then it would be a neutral consumer or producer co- operative moving between the poles of ethics and economics. It would know neither
Line 65: Line 227:
- Carl Schmitt, cited by Kojin Karatani, [[Structure of World History]], p. 305
- Carl Schmitt, cited by Kojin Karatani, [[Structure of World History]], p. 305


=== John Bunzl on the Need for Simultaneous Policy To Overcome the Limitations of the Nation-State ===
The simple fact, then, is there can be no change to the existing OS (= operating system) without a transformation of the nation-state system. It must somehow be transformed from its present mode of destructive competition to a new mode of fruitful cooperation. In our globalized and highly interconnected world, there simply is no other alternative if we want things to change for the better. Yes, there may be minor changes and improvements that could be possible lower down the system at local, national or regional levels. But without a change of the OS at the global level, lower-level changes will always be hampered, undermined and ultimately prove futile. The pathology at the top of the system will always trickle its poison to the lower levels. Indeed, to think we could make our global economy just and sustainable without cooperative governance on the same global scale is just wishful thinking. Fortunately, the Simultaneous Policy (Simpol) campaign www.simpol.org offers a practical answer to the question of how to effect this transformation."
(https://medium.com/@johnbunzl_93216/we-need-a-new-operating-system-the-gauntlet-has-been-laid-down-49689addc894)
=== [[Arran Gare]] on the Need for [[Strong Democracy]] ===
“The current form of the globalized economy has disempowered
local communities and is characterized by massive concentrated power
in a global ruling class of managers based in transnational corporations.
These power relations are inimical to achieving sustainable
development. What are now required are institutions that can re-embed
markets in communities, making markets serve the ends of these
communities rather than enslaving communities to the logic of
disembedded markets, manipulated to serve the interests of these
global power elites. A global economy is unavoidable, but it needs to be
radically transformed and economic life re-localized as much as
Possible.”
(https://www.academia.edu/43252621/Toward_an_Ecological_Civilization_-_An_Interview_with_Arran_Gare?)
=== Robert Conan Ryan on the [[Fifth Magisterium of the Commons]] ===
"Neither science nor technology can provide the answers to the correct human limits and environmental limits
One of my conclusions, in my historical analysis, is that we need a fifth Magisterium: the environmental magisterium, a set of institutions with special powers to balance the others.
We therefore need international organizations that can actually block environmental exploitation and manage resources with more independence from the other magistetia powers.
The other conclusion: strengthening the powers of the cultural commons to develop better ways of living for their own sake , rather than for the sake of business .
By strengthening the cultural commons and adding a true environmental Magisteria to our world system, we could solve many institutional problems that otherwise seem unsolvable."
- Robert Conan Ryan [https://www.facebook.com/groups/322508360006/permalink/10164170635700007/?]
=== On the Necessity of Intermediary Scales for the Legitimacy of the Planetary ===
"If you just say we need a “global management authority” and don’t think about the intermediate scales by which people have relations to it, that’s a problem.
I want to keep making my Montesquieuian and Tocquevillian argument for the intermediate scale: Even the planetary scale depends in some part on legitimacy, participation, acceptance and recognition of problems that come from these intermediate scales. Now, that doesn’t mean that everybody participates in making every decision; you could have a technocratic planetary management linked to a more or less democratic governance structure, with some mechanism of democratic participation. But when you centralize, be sure that you have also created mechanisms for decentralized discourse in relation to the center."
- Craig Calhoun [https://www.noemamag.com/in-pursuit-of-post-national-politics/]
=== Jeffery Ladish, on why, absent global coordination, future technology will cause human extinction ===
"Absent strong coordination mechanisms, future technological development suffers from the unilateralist's curse. Real global coordination is necessary to systematically disincentivize the creation of dangerous tech. And even then, disincentivizing the creation of dangerous tech is insufficient, because it may not be easy to tell in advance which technologies will prove dangerous. Even if every country in the world agreed to share intelligence about technological threats and enforce international laws about their use, there is no guarantee a black marble would not be pulled out by accident. A global framework must also incentivize rigorous risk analysis, the right kinds of caution, and quick responses to potentially dangerous developments. Presently, several organizations are undergoing difficult research into the potential pitfalls of artificial general intelligence. There is little agreement about the right approach to safe development. Other risks, like those posed from synthetic biology, have no dedicated research organizations and only receive a small amount of attention in the literature today. To overcome these problems, there must be a powerful international mandate to systematically study these risks and create thorough and practical risk reduction frameworks that can be applied in every part of the world."
- Jeffery Ladish [https://mflb.com/civ_dev_1/ladish_extinction_out.pdf]
=== On the need for a positive 'noospheric' discourse ===
"Existing discourses about globalization are not very encouraging for the future of humanity.
* The Anthropocene focuses on the negative global impact of humans (Steffen et al., 2007).
* The Globalization discourse is focused on socio-political and economical issues and has troubles caring about and integrating growing geosphere and biosphere challenges (e.g., Odum, 2001).
* The Gaia hypothesis (e.g., Lovelock, 1979) takes an organic view of planet Earth but neglects or sees in a negative light human activities and technologies.
* The techno-singularity discourse (e.g., Kurzweil, 2005) is more positive by focusing on the promises of artificial intelligence and machines, but it has been criticized as a techno-utopia (e.g., Cole-Turner, 2012; Hughes, 2012) and has not much to say about pressing real-world issues affecting the geosphere or the biosphere.
'''By contrast, a growing Noosphere discourse proposes a meaningful narrative and vision for the future, where the geosphere, the biosphere and the noosphere—including humans and machines—could work in concert to unleash a new level in evolution'''."
- Clement Vidal [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/sres.2997]
===The [[Cosmopolis]] as a Protocol===
'''1.'''
"Nation-states organize affective memories into a vibe-based territorial logic,
metropolises organize declarative memories into capability based physical network supernodes that are dense population centers
cosmopolises organize procedural memories into widely diffused infrastructures."
'''2.'''
"More than one distinctive cosmopolis may emerge in response to a technological stimulus, and the set of cosmopolises may not be either mutually exclusive or collectively exhaustive in relation to either the planet or the political world. A cosmopolis is not a planetarity. It is a smaller unit of analysis, and a legibly embodied geographic reality in a way a planetarity is not. '''We can sketch out cosmopolises on maps. ... new technologies induce new normals through protocolization of what is initially a weird and scary sort of monstrousness irrupting across a frontier. Beyond that frontier lies a new kind of territory, a new kind of “soil” on which societies can be built. Protocols are the engines of what I called manufactured normalcy a decade ago, and cosmopolises correspond loosely to what I called Manufactured Normalcy Fields.'''
- Venkatesh Rao [https://contraptions.venkateshrao.com/p/welcome-to-the-cosmopolis]


=Topics=
=Topics=
Line 78: Line 330:
#In his book, [[Occupy World Street]], Ross Jackson proposes '''the creation of  a Gaian League'''.
#In his book, [[Occupy World Street]], Ross Jackson proposes '''the creation of  a Gaian League'''.
#The [[Political Economy of Sharing]]. By Adam Parsons.
#The [[Political Economy of Sharing]]. By Adam Parsons.
#Benjamin Studebaker on [[Global Political Federalism]] [https://www.streitcouncil.org/post/why-federalism-the-problem-that-needs-to-be-solved]


==Institutional Proposals for Global Governance==
==Institutional Proposals for Global Governance==
Line 150: Line 403:


==Key Articles==
==Key Articles==
* Introduction to current geopolitical conflicts: [https://johnmenadue.com/russophobia-and-sinophobia-projection-narcissism-and-denial/ Russophobia and Sinophobia ]: projection, narcissism and denial. By Kari McKern.


===[[James Quilligan]]===
===[[James Quilligan]]===
Line 165: Line 421:
* [[Six Mind Changes Necessary To Achieve Global Community Policies]].
* [[Six Mind Changes Necessary To Achieve Global Community Policies]].


* Res Publica ex Machina: On [[Neocybernetic Governance and the End of Politics]].
* Res Publica ex Machina: On [[Neocybernetic Governance and the End of Politics]]. by FELIX MASCHEWSKI & ANNA-VERENA NOSTHOFF. Institute of Network Cultures, October, 2018 [http://networkcultures.org/longform/2018/10/18/res-publica-ex-machina-on-neocybernetic-governance-and-the-end-of-politics/]
by FELIX MASCHEWSKI & ANNA-VERENA NOSTHOFF. Institute of Network Cultures,
 
October, 2018 [http://networkcultures.org/longform/2018/10/18/res-publica-ex-machina-on-neocybernetic-governance-and-the-end-of-politics/]
* [[Scaling Trust and Social Control Mechanisms to the Global Level]]. By David Sloan Wilson and Dag Olav Hessen.


==Key Books==
==Key Books==
* Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages. Saskia Sassen. Princeton University Press, 2008 [https://press.princeton.edu/books/paperback/9780691136455/territory-authority-rights]: How nation-states created their own replacements. For more, see: [[From Medieval to Post-National Global Assemblages]]


*  George Monbiot "has written 'The Age of Consent' which calls for a new political movement to democratize existing global institutions." [http://www.integralworld.net/harris18.html]
*  George Monbiot "has written 'The Age of Consent' which calls for a new political movement to democratize existing global institutions." [http://www.integralworld.net/harris18.html]
Line 177: Line 435:
* Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri have argued that we are creating a new order of supranational organization in '[[Empire]]'. [http://www.integralworld.net/harris18.html]
* Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri have argued that we are creating a new order of supranational organization in '[[Empire]]'. [http://www.integralworld.net/harris18.html]


* Book: '''The [[Commons and a New Global Governance]].''' Edited by Samuel Cogolati and Jan Wouters. Leuven Global Governance series, Elgar, 2018 [https://www.elgaronline.com/abstract/edcoll/9781788118507/9781788118507.xml]: "explores the democratic, institutional, and legal implications of the commons for global governance today."
* '''The [[Commons and a New Global Governance]].''' Edited by Samuel Cogolati and Jan Wouters. Leuven Global Governance series, Elgar, 2018 [https://www.elgaronline.com/abstract/edcoll/9781788118507/9781788118507.xml]: "explores the democratic, institutional, and legal implications of the commons for global governance today."
 




Line 189: Line 446:


*  [[People-Centred Global Governance]] - Making it Happen!, by John Bunzl. [http://www.simpol.org/en/books/Books_FS.htm] ; [http://www.simpol.org/en/books/PCGG%20Manuscript%203.7%20-%20Site%20version.pdf download]
*  [[People-Centred Global Governance]] - Making it Happen!, by John Bunzl. [http://www.simpol.org/en/books/Books_FS.htm] ; [http://www.simpol.org/en/books/PCGG%20Manuscript%203.7%20-%20Site%20version.pdf download]


===Others===
===Others===


* [[Divided Nations]]. by Ian Goldin
* [[Divided Nations]]. by Ian Goldin
==Key Concepts==
Reproduced from Nafeez Ahmed: [https://ageoftransformation.org/introducing-the-planetary-intelligence-bulletin/]
[[Planetary Phase Shift]]: A systemic civilizational transformation involving the collapse of the fossil-fueled industrial paradigm and the potential emergence of a regenerative, distributed, and post-extractive operating system. The latter is not guaranteed.
Control Room: The domain of worldviews, governance models, economic logics, and cultural values that shape collective decision-making and institutional behavior.
Engine Room: The material infrastructure of civilization—energy systems, food production, mobility networks, information flows, and materials—which reflect and reproduce the operating logic of the control room.
[[Polycrisis]]: The convergence and entanglement of multiple interrelated crises—climate, economic, geopolitical, cultural—into a self-reinforcing system of instability.
[[Tipping Point]]: A threshold at which a small additional stressor causes a system to shift irreversibly to a new state.
[[Feedback Loop]]: A process where a change in one part of a system either amplifies (positive feedback) or dampens (negative feedback) changes elsewhere in the system.
[[Degenerative System]]: An extractive, polluting, and inequitable system that undermines ecological integrity and human well-being over time.
[[Regenerative System]]: A system that restores ecosystems, builds social equity, and enhances systemic resilience by working with natural and social feedbacks.
Strategic Foresight: The disciplined exploration of plausible futures to inform decision-making in conditions of complexity and uncertainty.
[[Planetary Intelligence]]: The capacity to perceive, interpret and act upon systemic risks and opportunities in ways that align human activity with the Earth’s life-support systems.
=Typology of Global Institutions=
'''1. Cadell Last:'''
"Potential political forms of global institutions.
Global institutions Definitions/examples
(1) '''Neoliberal institutions''': Contemporary globalization is guided via neoliberal institutions that were originally created under patronage of United States of America, and include structures like the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, World Trade Organization which have formed/are forming a global bureaucratic structure that is essentially anti-democratic,
* A) enabling monopoly control of an international finance system designed to protect creditors,
* B) sublimating all human activity into market activity,
* C) creating barriers to access of basic necessities and
* D) failing to address issues of economy-ecology sustainability.
(2) '''Keynesian institutions''': One potential solution to the dominance of neoliberal institutions (1) would include a ‘Keynesian’ institutional construction project where a global state, presumably with top-down mechanisms characteristic of nation-states at the planetary level, would form enabling the democratic election of state officials, the regulation of global market activity, creation of a common monetary union, redistribution of income and wealth, and the organization of international state projects related to social and ecological welfare.
(3) '''Commons institutions''': Another alternative potential solution to the dominance of neoliberal institutions
* (1) would be the creation of ‘commons institutions’, which, instead of forming a ‘top-down’ global state bureaucracy
* (2), would include the creation of ‘bottom-up’ distributed multi-level organizational forms that operated on
** A) various common property regimes (essentially striving for post-property regimes),
** B) functioned on principles of universal access (post-monetary), and
** C) multiple context-specific egalitarian-democratic management organizations related to resources and
services that are inherently rival (i.e. scarce), and thus need management due to ‘tragedy of the commons’ problems. (Further exploration of the potential nature of ‘commons institutions’, see: Table 3)
(4) '''Anarchism''' (no global institutional forms)
Yet another potential solution to the dominance of neoliberal institutions (1) would simply be to negate the entire notion of the need for qualitatively novel large-scale political collectives (‘global institutions’in either a Keynesian or Commons form) (2, 3) and instead direct focus towards the creation and management of locally self-organized egalitarian communities. However, such an approach leaves massive questions of how to approach the real existence of neoliberal institutions, as well as how to approach planetary problems of the common sphere."
(https://cadelllast.files.wordpress.com/2012/12/last-c-2016-global-commons-in-the-global-brain.pdf)
==Towards a mature technosphere==
* Frank A, Grinspoon D, Walker S (2022). Intelligence as a planetary scale process. International Journal of Astrobiology 21,47–61.
URL = https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/5077C784D7FAC55F96072F7A7772C5E5/S147355042100029Xa.pdf/intelligence-as-a-planetary-scale-process.pdf
This article proposes a four-stage evolution, three of which have already evolved:
* a planet with a immature biosphere: no planetary intelligence
* a planet with a mature biosphere: emergence of planetary intelligence through cooperation amongst species
* a planet with a immature technosphere: humans produce technology that endangers the biosphere
*a planet where humanity is able to manage the effects of its technosphere for long-term sustainability of the biosphere
== China's The Stability Model vs Trump's Performance Model ==
Gill Duran:
"Robb says, we need a government that operates more like a modern combat jet. That is, a Network State government designed for instability and piloted by computers.
Robb sees two competing models for global government:
* The Stability Model (“China’s Approach”)
Uses censorship, surveillance, and centralized control to suppress dissent and enforce ideological uniformity.
This model (Robb says) was briefly tested in the U.S. (via social media bans and deplatforming) but the effort collapsed after Elon Musk took over X (Twitter).
Robb:
The attempt to use this model in the US failed (mainly due to Musk’s acquisition of X). The jury is still out on China. However, the long-term prospects are bleak. Narrowing thought down to a narrow orthodoxy will likely eliminate the innovation China needs to keep pace with the rest of the world.
* The Performance Model (The Red Tribe’s Attempt)
The new U.S. administration is trying to modernize governance using AI and centralized data tracking.
DOGE is being developed to monitor government operations and remove opposition within the bureaucracy.
Goal is to make government leaner, faster and more aligned with Red Tribe ideology by eliminating internal opposition through firings and purges.
Robb:
DOGE is centralizing control over the government’s data, from finances to personnel. Think of it as building an organizational dashboard for the entire US government, making it possible to manage, measure, and control programs and personnel in a way that has never been possible before. Also, and this will be important going forward, this data centralization makes it accessible to AI analysis and control."
(https://www.thenerdreich.com/network-state-government-ai-tech-takeover-united-states/?)
=Visualizations=
==1. [[Stages of Evolving Global Self-Organization]] ==
[[File:Pogany-Stages.png]]
Source: Stages of Evolving Global Self-Organization, from "What’s wrong with the world? Rationality! A critique of economic anthropology in the spirit of Jean Gebser" by Peter Pogany. Shenandoah Valley Research Press, 5. November 2010
==2. Characteristics of the third global epoch, according to [[Peter Pogany]]==
[[File:DavidMacLeod%2BGS3.png]]
Source: David MacLeod added another stage, GS3, to Peter Pogany's table.

Latest revision as of 00:34, 19 November 2025


Introduction

World History as a Thermodynamic Process and the coming of a Third Global World System]]. Peter Pogany.

Introduction by James Quilligan: Beyond State Capitalism: The Commons Economy in our Lifetimes. [4]


See also:

  1. A framework for Local To Global Public Finance
  2. Establishing Global Common Goods, a Global Resource Agency and a Commons Reserve Currency
  3. The Co-Governance and Co-Production of the Commons through Commons Trusts (i.e. Common Wealth Trusts) on the basis of Social Charters
  4. Replacing the scarcity-engineering of neoliberal markets by the abundance engineering of the commons, see the Abundance - Typology and the Wealth Typology
  5. The context for policy change: Four Future Scenarios for the Global System, from: GLOBAL MEGACRISIS. A Survey of Four Scenarios on a Pessimism-Optimism Axis. By William Halal and Michael Marien.
  6. Mark Whitaker's book, Toward a Bioregional State, proposes a global Bioregional Democracy based on Civic Democratic Institutions and a Commodity Ecology


Sacha Pignot on the Three Levels of the Cosmo-Local Fractal Sovereignty Stack

Sacha Pignot identifies three levels of Fractal Sovereignty:


Hyper-Localism (micro level)

"The Connected Foundation:


Hyper-localism in fractal sovereignty isn’t isolation—it’s creating resilient foundation layers that can participate meaningfully in larger networks.


This includes:

- Household production: Food preservation, craft production, repair culture, energy generation

- Community workshops: Shared tools, skill exchanges, local fabrication capabilities

- Neighborhood resource sharing: Tool libraries, community kitchens, local currency systems

- Immediate ecosystem management: Watershed stewardship, local food systems, micro-grids


The key innovation: these systems maintain full autonomy over production processes and resource allocation while accessing global knowledge networks when beneficial. A community workshop using locally sourced wood can access global design innovations while maintaining control over working conditions.


Bioregionalism (meso level)

The Ecological Integration level:

"Bioregionalism organizes human activity along ecological boundaries rather than political ones. Watersheds, climate zones, ecosystems, and natural resource patterns define the scale of coordination, creating economic systems that work with ecological processes rather than against them.

In fractal sovereignty, bioregions function as meso-scale networks connecting multiple hyper-local communities while respecting ecological carrying capacity. Different communities might specialize—agriculture, manufacturing, knowledge work—while sharing resources and coordinating to maintain ecological balance.

Bioregional coordination operates through network dynamics rather than hierarchical control. Communities share information about resource availability, ecological conditions, production capacity, and needs through distributed networks while maintaining local autonomy."


Cosmo-Localism (macro level)

The Global Knowledge, Local Control level:

Unlike linear globalism creating disconnected extremities, cosmo-localism follows an ouroboros pattern—a cycle where global knowledge flows back to enhance local capacity, which in turn contributes to global knowledge.

This creates a regenerative loop rather than extractive pipeline: local innovations get documented and shared globally, global knowledge gets adapted to local conditions, and the cycle continues with each iteration building capacity at all scales."

(https://soushi888.substack.com/p/beyond-local-vs-global)

Quotes

Short Quotes

We need a scalable, networked form of social cohesion

"Crude forms of identity are emerging to provide social cohesion as national identity melts away. We need a scalable, networked form of social cohesion to replace those crude forms. That requires finding and reinforcing networks of consensus."

- John Robb (fb, 2020)


G. Kallis on 'When Autonomy becomes Heteronomy'

“Self-limitation requires institutions at higher levels to secure the endurance of agreed limits.” : “The setting of limits is then partly a problem of global, collective action: can we set up the higher-level international institutions that can control, say, carbon emissions or aggression or competition, and let nations and lower-level polities set up their own limits?”

(https://docs.google.com/document/d/19EfFqpI6H-wDH379qG0tFkMpgTKphV5tVCUcYycyT3M/edit)


Long Quotes

The advent of hyper-empowered networks in a quadriformist age

1.

"Societies have relied across the ages on four cardinal forms of organization: kinship-oriented tribes, hierarchical institutions, competitive markets, and collaborative networks. These forms have co-existed since people first began to assemble into societies — there was always someone doing some activity using one or more of those basic forms. But each has emerged and taken hold as a major form of organization, governance, and evolution in a different historical era. Tribes were first millennia ago (with civil society becoming its modern manifestation); institutions developed millennia later (e.g., states, armies); then centuries later came market systems for growing our economies — hence modern societies with their three major realms.

“If that were the end of the story, our prospects for evolving still more complex societies would be nearing an evolutionary cul-de-sac (“the end of history”). Notice, however, that the network form is only now coming into its own, starting a few decades ago. Network forms have been around, in use, for millennia. But they have lacked the right kind of information and communications technology to enable them to take hold and spread. Each preceding form emerged, in turn, because an enabling information technology revolution occurred at the time — i.e., speech and storytelling for tribes, writing and printing for institutions, telegraphy and telephony for markets. The ongoing digital information technology revolution is finally energizing the network form, enabling it to compete with the other forms and address problems they aren’t good at resolving."

- David Ronfeldt [5]


2.

David Ronfeldt:

"“We currently live in an advanced modern society that has a triform design — meaning it has three major realms: civil society, government, and an economy, variously arranged and each relying on its own form organization. This triform design emerged several centuries ago. It still holds sway today.

“Indeed, nearly all of today’s ideological isms — capitalism, liberalism, conservatism, progressivism, and populism, as well as trendier anarcho-capitalism, neo-libertarianism, neo-monarchism, accelerationism, national conservatism, techno-humanism, techno-colonialism, cosmo-localism, etc. — are triform in nature. They address how civil-society, government, and/or the economy should be shaped, and how their actors are supposed to think and behave. All of today’s politicians are, at best, triformists.

“But triform societies are now nearing their end. Because of growing social complexities and complications, they have nearly exhausted their capabilities as designs that can address and resolve all they need to.

“Quadriformism is where future evolution is headed — a distinct fourth realm will emerge and take shape in the decades ahead, absorbing particular kinds of actors and activities that the current three realms are no longer able to handle well. There are reasons to project that this next new realm will consist largely of health, education, welfare, and environmental actors and activities — matters that are about care, broadly defined, rather than identity, power, or profit. These care-centric actors and activities will move (and be moved) into this new realm, which will be as distinct and independent in design as the current three realms are from each other.

“This evolution from triform to quadriform designs will radically redefine the nature of societies as a whole, and improve the performance capabilities of all four realms. New philosophies and ideologies will arise.”

(https://davidronfeldt.substack.com/p/looking-for-a-better-ideology-quadriformism-34f)


The Post-Westphalian Planetary Order of Planetary Cooperation

Cosmo-Local Bioregionalism facilited by Partner States:

"Nearly five hundred years ago, the Treaty of Westphalia applied the ancient system of core and periphery to a governance structure, which later evolved into sovereign international law. But managing the real wealth of resources according to their energy potential has never been possible in a core-periphery regime. Today, the planet’s steady rise in temperatures, extreme weather, and declines in net energy require a system of logistic growth to maintain the sustainable yield of its habitats, for which few leaders are now prepared (Brown 2003, 131--50). If, as in the past, a core like China/Russia or America/Europe were to establish control of the world’s net energy by exploiting their periphery endowed with cheap and plentiful sources of energy, the newly arrived hegemon will immediately encounter the challenges of declining resources, food and water rationing, roaming populations, and overwhelming dissent. The system of core-periphery is decaying, and any attempt to recreate the historical mismatch between hegemon and energy will bring on diminishing returns and autocratic shambles. The next core power would destroy its own capacities in taking on the role of planetary administrator for a new ecological, cultural, social, political, and economic order under daunting emergency conditions."

- James Quilligan [6]


Peter Pogany on the Transition towards a Third Thermo-Dynamically Stable World System

"His theory predicts that global society is drifting toward a new form of self-organization that will recognize limits to demographic-economic expansion – but only after we go through a new chaotic transition that will start sometime between now and the 2030s:

"History has recorded two distinct global systems thus far: “laissez faire/metal money,” which spanned most of the 19th century and lasted until the outbreak of World War I, and “mixed economy/weak multilateralism,” which began after 1945 and exists today. The period between the two systems, 1914-1945, was a chaotic transition. This evolutionary pulsation is well known to students of thermodynamics. It corresponds to the behavior of expanding and complexifying material systems.

The exhaustion of oil and other natural resources is pushing the world toward a third global system that may be called “two-level economy/strong multilateralism.” It will be impossible to get there without a new chaotic transition. No repeated warnings, academic advice, moral advocacy, inspired reforms, or political leadership can provide a shortcut around it. But if it took “1914-1945″ to make a relatively minor adjustment in the global order, what will it take to make a major one?”

- Peter Pogany [7] (via Dave McLeod)


DAO's as Seeds of Distributed Social Governance in a Viscous Society

"Seeing the global society in terms of strict dichotomy of “disorder versus structure/control” is counter-productive for understanding and governing it. Both ends of this dichotomy are undesirable: disorder is simply not a viable solution for society, while stable structures are not sustainable and even harmful due to the increasing social complexity. We therefore propose to approach society in terms of a fine balance of ever adapting temporary structures in otherwise fluid whole — a 'viscous' system." ... "What we propose with the image of A World of Views and the Living Cognitive Society is the shift of emphasis from the structures and institutions to the very process of creation, adaptation and dissolution of social subsystems at all scales of the global society. Furthermore, the naturally distributed nature of the process – meaning the absence of central body or ‘trusted party’ governing it – should be embraced, rather than fought with establishing global institutions or ‘world governments’ as, we maintain, no stable structure would be able to outweigh the factors of social complexity driving the society towards increasing fluidity."

- Viktoras Veitas and David Weinbaum [8]


Nick Dyer-Witheford on Three Global Solution Tribes

"The conjuncture requires an analysis that comprehends not just at the World Trade Organization and the Zapatistas, but also Al Quaeda (not to mention all the Christian, Hindu, Judaic theocratic fundamentalisms).

Sketching in the ashes of a global war scenario, I propose a triangulation between three points:

a) The logic of neoliberal capitalism. I call this the logic of the World Market. It interpellates a planet of market subjects: consumers.

b) The logic of exclusionary ethno-nationalist-religious movements. I call this the logic of Fundamentalist Reaction. It addresses a planet lethally divided amongst chosen peoples.

c) The logic of collective creativity and welfare proposed by the counter-globalization movements. I call this the logic of Species Beings. It speaks to a planet of commoners. A whole series of molecular energies are currently being attracted, apportioned and annihilated between these three molar aggregates."

- Nick Dyer-Witheford [9]


Jose Ramos on Cosmo-Localism

"Cosmo-Localization describes the dynamic potentials of the globally distributed knowledge commons in conjunction with emerging capacity for localized production of value. The imperative to create economically and ecologically resilient communities is driving initiatives for ‘re-localization’. Yet, such efforts for re-localization need to be put in the context of new technologies, national policy, transnational knowledge regimes and the wider global knowledge commons."

- Jose Ramos [10]


A.J. Toynbee on the role of Small Scale within Big Scale

“The present day global set of sovereign states is not capable of keeping peace, and it is not capable of saving the biosphere’s non-replaceable natural resources. What has been needed for the last 5,000 years, has become technologically feasible in the last 100, but not yet politically, is a global body politic composed of cells on the scale of the Neolithic-Age village community - a scale on which participants could be personally acquainted with each other, while each of them would also be a citizen of the world state.”

- A.J. Toynbee [11]


Brian Holmes on how market and state failure can lead to a commons resurgence at the global scale

"Minqi Li's claim is that too many formerly peripheral countries -- especially the giants, India and China -- have moved into the position of what the world systems theorists call "semi-peripheral" countries, supplying mid-range or partially elaborated products to the central, high-technology producers. The result is a declining pool of people to exploit, both in terms of labor and resources, and in terms of defenseless markets that must necessarily buy products from the center. When large percentages of the world population have access to at least mid-level producer technology, capital can no longer accumulate at the former centers, whose power declines. The current state of affairs in Western Europe and the US/Canada seems to bear this thesis out.

In such a perspective, the p2p ideas and those of everyone working on p2p and commons approaches become far more pertinent. When the centers of capital accumulation can off the fruits of very high technology to all of those, across the world, who rise into the middle classes, then there is scant likelihood of winning them over to a cooperative approach -- the powers of capitalist seduction are just too strong. Yet in a condition of long-term stagnation, coupled with environmental threats stemming directly and visibly from capital accumulation, alternative proposals may become much more attractive across a flattening global hierarchy."

- Brian Holmes, August 2014


Engage Global, Test Local, Spread Viral

John Boik:

"No matter how promising the design of a new system might be, it would be unreasonable to expect that a nation would abruptly drop an existing system in favor of a new one. Nevertheless, a viable, even attractive strategy exists by which new systems could be successfully researched, developed, tested, and implemented. I call it engage global, test local, spread viral.

Engage global means to engage the global academic community and technical sector, in partnership with other segments of society, in a well-defined R&D program aimed at computer simulation and scientific field testing of new systems and benchmarking of results. In this way, the most profound insights of science can be brought into play.

Test local means to scientifically test new designs at the local (e.g., city or community) level, using volunteers (individuals, businesses, non-profits, etc.) organized as civic clubs. This approach allows testing by relatively small teams, at relatively low cost and risk, in coexistence with existing systems, and without legislative action.

Spread viral means that if a system shows clear benefits in one location (elimination of poverty, for example, more meaningful jobs, or less crime) it would likely spread horizontally, even virally, to other local areas. This approach would create a global network of communities and cities that cooperate in trade, education, the setup of new systems, and other matters. Over time, its impact on all segments of society would grow.

Cities, big and small, are the legs upon which all national systems rest. Already cities and their communities are hubs for innovation. With some further encouragement and support, and the right tools and programs, they could become more resilient and robust, and bigger heroes in the coming great transition." (https://medium.com/@JohnBoik/an-economy-of-meaning-or-bust-2aa46457b649#.1i09j8lv3)


Carl Schmitt on how a world state based on reciprocity would overcome perpetual war

"Were a world state to embrace the entire globe and humanity, then it would be no political entity and could only loosely be called a state. If, in fact, all humanity and the entire world were to become a unified entity . . . [and should] that interest group also want to become cultural, ideological, or otherwise more ambitious, and yet remain strictly nonpolitical, then it would be a neutral consumer or producer co- operative moving between the poles of ethics and economics. It would know neither state nor kingdom nor empire, neither republic nor monarchy, neither aristocracy nor democracy, neither protection nor obedience, and would altogether lose its political character."

- Carl Schmitt, cited by Kojin Karatani, Structure of World History, p. 305


John Bunzl on the Need for Simultaneous Policy To Overcome the Limitations of the Nation-State

The simple fact, then, is there can be no change to the existing OS (= operating system) without a transformation of the nation-state system. It must somehow be transformed from its present mode of destructive competition to a new mode of fruitful cooperation. In our globalized and highly interconnected world, there simply is no other alternative if we want things to change for the better. Yes, there may be minor changes and improvements that could be possible lower down the system at local, national or regional levels. But without a change of the OS at the global level, lower-level changes will always be hampered, undermined and ultimately prove futile. The pathology at the top of the system will always trickle its poison to the lower levels. Indeed, to think we could make our global economy just and sustainable without cooperative governance on the same global scale is just wishful thinking. Fortunately, the Simultaneous Policy (Simpol) campaign www.simpol.org offers a practical answer to the question of how to effect this transformation." (https://medium.com/@johnbunzl_93216/we-need-a-new-operating-system-the-gauntlet-has-been-laid-down-49689addc894)


Arran Gare on the Need for Strong Democracy

“The current form of the globalized economy has disempowered local communities and is characterized by massive concentrated power in a global ruling class of managers based in transnational corporations. These power relations are inimical to achieving sustainable development. What are now required are institutions that can re-embed markets in communities, making markets serve the ends of these communities rather than enslaving communities to the logic of disembedded markets, manipulated to serve the interests of these global power elites. A global economy is unavoidable, but it needs to be radically transformed and economic life re-localized as much as Possible.”

(https://www.academia.edu/43252621/Toward_an_Ecological_Civilization_-_An_Interview_with_Arran_Gare?)



Robert Conan Ryan on the Fifth Magisterium of the Commons

"Neither science nor technology can provide the answers to the correct human limits and environmental limits One of my conclusions, in my historical analysis, is that we need a fifth Magisterium: the environmental magisterium, a set of institutions with special powers to balance the others.

We therefore need international organizations that can actually block environmental exploitation and manage resources with more independence from the other magistetia powers.

The other conclusion: strengthening the powers of the cultural commons to develop better ways of living for their own sake , rather than for the sake of business .

By strengthening the cultural commons and adding a true environmental Magisteria to our world system, we could solve many institutional problems that otherwise seem unsolvable."

- Robert Conan Ryan [12]


On the Necessity of Intermediary Scales for the Legitimacy of the Planetary

"If you just say we need a “global management authority” and don’t think about the intermediate scales by which people have relations to it, that’s a problem.

I want to keep making my Montesquieuian and Tocquevillian argument for the intermediate scale: Even the planetary scale depends in some part on legitimacy, participation, acceptance and recognition of problems that come from these intermediate scales. Now, that doesn’t mean that everybody participates in making every decision; you could have a technocratic planetary management linked to a more or less democratic governance structure, with some mechanism of democratic participation. But when you centralize, be sure that you have also created mechanisms for decentralized discourse in relation to the center."

- Craig Calhoun [13]


Jeffery Ladish, on why, absent global coordination, future technology will cause human extinction

"Absent strong coordination mechanisms, future technological development suffers from the unilateralist's curse. Real global coordination is necessary to systematically disincentivize the creation of dangerous tech. And even then, disincentivizing the creation of dangerous tech is insufficient, because it may not be easy to tell in advance which technologies will prove dangerous. Even if every country in the world agreed to share intelligence about technological threats and enforce international laws about their use, there is no guarantee a black marble would not be pulled out by accident. A global framework must also incentivize rigorous risk analysis, the right kinds of caution, and quick responses to potentially dangerous developments. Presently, several organizations are undergoing difficult research into the potential pitfalls of artificial general intelligence. There is little agreement about the right approach to safe development. Other risks, like those posed from synthetic biology, have no dedicated research organizations and only receive a small amount of attention in the literature today. To overcome these problems, there must be a powerful international mandate to systematically study these risks and create thorough and practical risk reduction frameworks that can be applied in every part of the world."

- Jeffery Ladish [14]


On the need for a positive 'noospheric' discourse

"Existing discourses about globalization are not very encouraging for the future of humanity.

  • The Anthropocene focuses on the negative global impact of humans (Steffen et al., 2007).
  • The Globalization discourse is focused on socio-political and economical issues and has troubles caring about and integrating growing geosphere and biosphere challenges (e.g., Odum, 2001).
  • The Gaia hypothesis (e.g., Lovelock, 1979) takes an organic view of planet Earth but neglects or sees in a negative light human activities and technologies.
  • The techno-singularity discourse (e.g., Kurzweil, 2005) is more positive by focusing on the promises of artificial intelligence and machines, but it has been criticized as a techno-utopia (e.g., Cole-Turner, 2012; Hughes, 2012) and has not much to say about pressing real-world issues affecting the geosphere or the biosphere.

By contrast, a growing Noosphere discourse proposes a meaningful narrative and vision for the future, where the geosphere, the biosphere and the noosphere—including humans and machines—could work in concert to unleash a new level in evolution."

- Clement Vidal [15]


The Cosmopolis as a Protocol

1.

"Nation-states organize affective memories into a vibe-based territorial logic, 
metropolises organize declarative memories into capability based physical network supernodes that are dense population centers 
cosmopolises organize procedural memories into widely diffused infrastructures."


2.

"More than one distinctive cosmopolis may emerge in response to a technological stimulus, and the set of cosmopolises may not be either mutually exclusive or collectively exhaustive in relation to either the planet or the political world. A cosmopolis is not a planetarity. It is a smaller unit of analysis, and a legibly embodied geographic reality in a way a planetarity is not. We can sketch out cosmopolises on maps. ... new technologies induce new normals through protocolization of what is initially a weird and scary sort of monstrousness irrupting across a frontier. Beyond that frontier lies a new kind of territory, a new kind of “soil” on which societies can be built. Protocols are the engines of what I called manufactured normalcy a decade ago, and cosmopolises correspond loosely to what I called Manufactured Normalcy Fields.

- Venkatesh Rao [16]

Topics

Global Commons and Participatory International Systems

  1. Global Commons and Common Sense. Jorge Buzaglo. real-world economics review, issue no. 51 [17] : policy proposals for a global governance of planetary commons
  2. Four Principles and Corollaries of Network Society and the New International Governance. By by Alexander Schellong, Philipp Mueller. [18]
  3. Hilary Cottam on Participatory Global Governance Systems: Winter 2010 (Vol.XXXI. No 4) edition of the Harvard International Review. [19]
  4. Philipp Mueller on Planetary Public Policy‎ and Open Statecraft
  5. Steve Waddell on Global Action Networks
  6. Developing the Meta Services for the Eco-Social Economy: on developing a framework for an eco-social economy - includings its arrangements to manage natural commons. Text proposed by Feasta, Ireland. By Brian Davey with the assistance of John Jopling.
  7. In his book, Occupy World Street, Ross Jackson proposes the creation of a Gaian League.
  8. The Political Economy of Sharing. By Adam Parsons.
  9. Benjamin Studebaker on Global Political Federalism [20]

Institutional Proposals for Global Governance


On the Influence of Technology on Global Politics

Via [21]

  • ‘algorithmic regulation’,
  • ‘government as a platform’ (Tim O’Reilly),
  • ‘direct technocracy’ viz. ‘info-states’ (Parag Khanna),
  • ‘smart states’ (Beth Noveck), or
  • ‘social physics’ (Alex Pentland)

People and Visions

Poor Richard: Framing the discussion in the contect of P2P-driven global governance

Poor Richard:

"Can a hollowed-out, privatized government to effectively cope with the increasing complexity of social and environmental crises such as global warming.

I agree that the failure of government regulation to curb the destructive activity of large corporations is only likely to worsen with the increasing privatization of government and the increasing complexity of global problems. So what can p2p culture do about this?

1. Establish powerful, confederated P2P Guilds and Leagues based on various global commons of knowledge and expertise so that mitigations, adaptations, and other interventions can be crowd-sourced by massively distributed, parallel, and open networks of peers.

2. Establish many strong, self-reliant economies at the local geopolitical (or Eco-political) level by forming partnerships between the P2P guilds and progressive local communities. These partnerships would maximize economies of scope via peer production and would also be strongly confederated with their peers bio-regionally, nationally, and globally.

3. One more maneuver that may be necessary to assist this process I will dub “castling”, a term borrowed from the game of chess. What I mean by this is a shifting of local populations between adjacent local geopolitical jurisdictions (such as cities and counties in the US) so as to create political, social, and economic majorities of p2p culture in the targeted locations.

The resulting strongly confederated p2p cultural strongholds might stand the best chance of competing with the large corporate entities, excluding them from the “castled” commons, and limiting the scope of their environmental destruction." (http://almanac2010.wordpress.com/2012/11/15/guilding-the-lilly/)

Alex Evans

  1. Shooting the Rapids: "argues that the key challenge is to join up the dots between the institutions, processes and actors that we have now. Part of this task involves expanding the scope of multilateralism to engage much more intensively with non-state actors"
  2. Multilateralism for an Age of Scarcity: paper uses the shared operating system / shared awareness / shared platforms framework (follow-up of Shooting the Rapids)

James Greyson

See: Seven Policy Switches for strategic change on a planetary level

James Quilligan

  1. Toward a Commons-based Framework for Global Negotiations
  2. People Sharing Resources. Toward a New Multilateralism of the Global Commons. James Bernard Quilligan Kosmos Journal, Fall | Winter 2009: this article frames what a global commons-based policy and governance structure should be.

PM

  1. Six Modules for the Institutions of the Global Commons‎‎
  2. Three Institutional Spheres of Commoning‎

Towards Open Civil Societies

  • Nora McKeon: Civil Society and the United Nations: Legitimating Global Governance-Whose Voice. (Zed 2009).


Key Resources

Key Articles


James Quilligan

On the overall framework of a Commons and Civil Society oriented global policy and governance framework that insures sustainability:

  • James Bernard Quilligan. People Sharing Resources. Toward a New Multilateralism of the Global Commons. Published in Kosmos Journal, Fall | Winter 2009

Others

Key Books

  • George Monbiot "has written 'The Age of Consent' which calls for a new political movement to democratize existing global institutions." [25]
  • The philosopher Peter Singer has written 'One World' which examines the ethics of globalization. [26]
  • Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri have argued that we are creating a new order of supranational organization in 'Empire'. [27]
  • The Commons and a New Global Governance. Edited by Samuel Cogolati and Jan Wouters. Leuven Global Governance series, Elgar, 2018 [28]: "explores the democratic, institutional, and legal implications of the commons for global governance today."


John Bunzl

Books by John Bunzl, the founder of Simpol, the International Simultaneous Policy Organization.

Amazon


Others


Key Concepts

Reproduced from Nafeez Ahmed: [30]

Planetary Phase Shift: A systemic civilizational transformation involving the collapse of the fossil-fueled industrial paradigm and the potential emergence of a regenerative, distributed, and post-extractive operating system. The latter is not guaranteed.

Control Room: The domain of worldviews, governance models, economic logics, and cultural values that shape collective decision-making and institutional behavior.

Engine Room: The material infrastructure of civilization—energy systems, food production, mobility networks, information flows, and materials—which reflect and reproduce the operating logic of the control room.

Polycrisis: The convergence and entanglement of multiple interrelated crises—climate, economic, geopolitical, cultural—into a self-reinforcing system of instability.

Tipping Point: A threshold at which a small additional stressor causes a system to shift irreversibly to a new state.

Feedback Loop: A process where a change in one part of a system either amplifies (positive feedback) or dampens (negative feedback) changes elsewhere in the system.

Degenerative System: An extractive, polluting, and inequitable system that undermines ecological integrity and human well-being over time.

Regenerative System: A system that restores ecosystems, builds social equity, and enhances systemic resilience by working with natural and social feedbacks.

Strategic Foresight: The disciplined exploration of plausible futures to inform decision-making in conditions of complexity and uncertainty.

Planetary Intelligence: The capacity to perceive, interpret and act upon systemic risks and opportunities in ways that align human activity with the Earth’s life-support systems.

Typology of Global Institutions

1. Cadell Last:

"Potential political forms of global institutions.

Global institutions Definitions/examples

(1) Neoliberal institutions: Contemporary globalization is guided via neoliberal institutions that were originally created under patronage of United States of America, and include structures like the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, World Trade Organization which have formed/are forming a global bureaucratic structure that is essentially anti-democratic,

  • A) enabling monopoly control of an international finance system designed to protect creditors,
  • B) sublimating all human activity into market activity,
  • C) creating barriers to access of basic necessities and
  • D) failing to address issues of economy-ecology sustainability.


(2) Keynesian institutions: One potential solution to the dominance of neoliberal institutions (1) would include a ‘Keynesian’ institutional construction project where a global state, presumably with top-down mechanisms characteristic of nation-states at the planetary level, would form enabling the democratic election of state officials, the regulation of global market activity, creation of a common monetary union, redistribution of income and wealth, and the organization of international state projects related to social and ecological welfare.


(3) Commons institutions: Another alternative potential solution to the dominance of neoliberal institutions

  • (1) would be the creation of ‘commons institutions’, which, instead of forming a ‘top-down’ global state bureaucracy
  • (2), would include the creation of ‘bottom-up’ distributed multi-level organizational forms that operated on
    • A) various common property regimes (essentially striving for post-property regimes),
    • B) functioned on principles of universal access (post-monetary), and
    • C) multiple context-specific egalitarian-democratic management organizations related to resources and

services that are inherently rival (i.e. scarce), and thus need management due to ‘tragedy of the commons’ problems. (Further exploration of the potential nature of ‘commons institutions’, see: Table 3)


(4) Anarchism (no global institutional forms)

Yet another potential solution to the dominance of neoliberal institutions (1) would simply be to negate the entire notion of the need for qualitatively novel large-scale political collectives (‘global institutions’in either a Keynesian or Commons form) (2, 3) and instead direct focus towards the creation and management of locally self-organized egalitarian communities. However, such an approach leaves massive questions of how to approach the real existence of neoliberal institutions, as well as how to approach planetary problems of the common sphere."

(https://cadelllast.files.wordpress.com/2012/12/last-c-2016-global-commons-in-the-global-brain.pdf)


Towards a mature technosphere

  • Frank A, Grinspoon D, Walker S (2022). Intelligence as a planetary scale process. International Journal of Astrobiology 21,47–61.

URL = https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/5077C784D7FAC55F96072F7A7772C5E5/S147355042100029Xa.pdf/intelligence-as-a-planetary-scale-process.pdf

This article proposes a four-stage evolution, three of which have already evolved:

  • a planet with a immature biosphere: no planetary intelligence
  • a planet with a mature biosphere: emergence of planetary intelligence through cooperation amongst species
  • a planet with a immature technosphere: humans produce technology that endangers the biosphere
*a planet where humanity is able to manage the effects of its technosphere for long-term sustainability of the biosphere


China's The Stability Model vs Trump's Performance Model

Gill Duran:

"Robb says, we need a government that operates more like a modern combat jet. That is, a Network State government designed for instability and piloted by computers.

Robb sees two competing models for global government:

  • The Stability Model (“China’s Approach”)

Uses censorship, surveillance, and centralized control to suppress dissent and enforce ideological uniformity. This model (Robb says) was briefly tested in the U.S. (via social media bans and deplatforming) but the effort collapsed after Elon Musk took over X (Twitter).

Robb:

The attempt to use this model in the US failed (mainly due to Musk’s acquisition of X). The jury is still out on China. However, the long-term prospects are bleak. Narrowing thought down to a narrow orthodoxy will likely eliminate the innovation China needs to keep pace with the rest of the world.


  • The Performance Model (The Red Tribe’s Attempt)

The new U.S. administration is trying to modernize governance using AI and centralized data tracking. DOGE is being developed to monitor government operations and remove opposition within the bureaucracy. Goal is to make government leaner, faster and more aligned with Red Tribe ideology by eliminating internal opposition through firings and purges.

Robb:

DOGE is centralizing control over the government’s data, from finances to personnel. Think of it as building an organizational dashboard for the entire US government, making it possible to manage, measure, and control programs and personnel in a way that has never been possible before. Also, and this will be important going forward, this data centralization makes it accessible to AI analysis and control."

(https://www.thenerdreich.com/network-state-government-ai-tech-takeover-united-states/?)

Visualizations

1. Stages of Evolving Global Self-Organization


Source: Stages of Evolving Global Self-Organization, from "What’s wrong with the world? Rationality! A critique of economic anthropology in the spirit of Jean Gebser" by Peter Pogany. Shenandoah Valley Research Press, 5. November 2010


2. Characteristics of the third global epoch, according to Peter Pogany

Source: David MacLeod added another stage, GS3, to Peter Pogany's table.

Pages in category "Global Governance"

The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 616 total.

(previous page) (next page)

3

C

(previous page) (next page)