Preamble
We, the inhabitants of Earth, recognizing our profound interdependence and indivisible responsibility for the well-being of our planetary home and for one another, hereby ordain and establish this Global Charter of Collective Stewardship. This Charter shall serve as the supreme legal framework for humanity in matters of defined planetary scope, addressing challenges that transcend national borders. It is created to secure the inherent rights and dignity of every person, ensure the just and sustainable stewardship of the biosphere, and foster an enduring future of peace, prosperity, and unity for all generations. By this instrument, humanity commits to a new era of global cooperation—one that is equitable, transparent, accountable, and adaptable. This Charter is a living document, subject to amendment through a defined democratic process, ensuring its evolution in concert with the needs and wisdom of a thriving global civilization.
Article I: Foundational Principles
Section 1.1: Supremacy, Subsidiarity, and Proportionality
This Charter and the laws enacted hereunder shall constitute the supreme legal framework for matters explicitly defined within this document. The supremacy of this Charter shall apply strictly to (a) the enforcement of Planetary Boundaries ratified under Sec 4.2, (b) the protection of the global commons as defined in Sec 1.2, and (c) the universal prohibition of acts defined in Sec 3.2. All other powers are reserved to national and local authorities, whose sovereignty in those areas is affirmed. The principles of Subsidiarity and Proportionality are enshrined as core tenets:
- (a) Governance shall be executed at the lowest effective level, from the local to the global. All powers not explicitly delegated to global bodies by this Charter are reserved to regional, national, and local governance structures.
- (b) Any action taken by a global body must be proportional to the objective it seeks to achieve and must not exceed what is necessary to achieve the goals of this Charter.
- (c) National and local authorities retain full sovereignty over their internal affairs, provided they do not violate the inherent rights or planetary stewardship obligations defined herein.
- (d) Legal Personhood of the Biosphere. The Earth's biosphere, as a living, self-regulating system, is hereby recognized as a legal entity possessing the inalienable right to exist, flourish, and maintain its vital cycles. The Directorate for Planetary Trust Management is designated as the legal guardian of the biosphere, empowered to bring cases before the Global Judicial Tribunal on behalf of ecosystems, species, or the climate system against any state, public enterprise, or cooperative whose actions infringe upon these rights.
Section 1.2: The Common Heritage of Humanity
The Earth's biosphere—including the atmosphere, the oceans beyond national jurisdiction, the cryosphere, Antarctica, and outer space—is the common heritage of all humanity and all life. It shall be managed in a sacred trust for future generations. No state, corporation, or individual may claim sovereign ownership over these domains or engage in their unilateral exploitation. The benefits derived from the sustainable use of the commons shall be shared equitably among all people.
Section 1.3: The Precautionary Principle and the Mandate for Risk Accountability
Invocation of the Principle: Where an action or policy carries a scientifically plausible risk of causing severe or irreversible harm to public health or the environment, the Precautionary Principle shall be invoked, and the following process is mandatory.
- (a) Risk, Accountability, and Reversibility (RAR) Analysis: Invocation of the Principle
shall trigger a comprehensive RAR analysis, to be funded entirely by the proponents of the
action. This analysis will produce a public dossier containing, at minimum:
- A detailed model of the worst-case plausible failure scenarios.
- A comprehensive plan for the monitoring systems that would detect early warning signs of such a failure.
- A fully detailed plan for the containment, mitigation, and reversal of potential harms.
- (b) Public Review and Comment: The complete RAR dossier, including a summary in plain, accessible language, shall be published and made available to the global public for a mandatory period of review and comment. The governance bodies and communities of any jurisdiction that would be directly affected by the proposed action shall have their formal, collective responses included as a primary document in the final dossier.
- (c) The Reversibility Bond: An independent Actuarial Commission, established under the authority of the Global Commons Authority, shall review the RAR dossier to determine the value of a mandatory Reversibility Bond. This bond must be sufficient to execute the full containment, mitigation, and reversal plan outlined in the dossier's worst-case scenario. The bond must be fully funded by the proponents and held in an independent trust before the approval process can proceed.
- (d) Final Approval: Final approval for the proposed action requires a joint, affirmative decision by the Global Commons Authority and the Global Bioethics Council. In their deliberation, both bodies are constitutionally required to give material weight to the full RAR dossier, the findings of the Actuarial Commission, and all formal responses submitted by affected communities.
- (e) Supreme Limitation: Notwithstanding any clause in this section, no analysis, bond, or approval process shall ever authorize an action that poses a scientifically plausible risk of violating a Planetary Boundary ratified under Section 4.2. Adherence to ratified Planetary Boundaries is an absolute and inviolable limitation on all actions undertaken by any party under the jurisdiction of this Charter.
Article II: Global Governance Framework
Section 2.1: The Global Governance Council (GGC)
The GGC is the bicameral legislative body of the global commons.
- (a) The Assembly of Representatives: The lower house, representing the global populace. For the first 30 years of this Charter's existence, the Assembly of Representatives shall be elected by the legislatures of Member States, with the number of representatives proportional to population. During this period, the Global Electoral Commission is mandated to develop, trial, and perfect the technology for a secure, verifiable, and universally accessible direct global voting system. Following this 30-year period, the direct voting system shall be implemented upon ratification by a global referendum.
- (b) The Council of Regions: The upper house, providing balanced regional representation. The initial structure shall grant an equal number of Councilors to each of the five recognized UN Regional Groups (Africa, Asia-Pacific, Eastern Europe, Latin America & Caribbean, Western Europe & Others, and the Transnational Region), elected by their respective Member States. The GGC may, by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses, revise this regional structure no more than once every 20 years.
- (c) Long-Term Viability Assessment. No law, budget, or resolution may be passed by the Global Governance Council until it has undergone a mandatory Long-Term Viability Assessment (LTVA). An independent body, the Office of Multi-Generational Foresight, is hereby established. This office is mandated to produce a Foresight and Risk Analysis on the probable consequences of all proposed legislation on planetary health, social stability, and resource availability on a 25, 50, and 100-year timescale. The full, unredacted report must be attached to the legislation before any vote can occur. Any legislation deemed by the Office to have a high probability of irreversible, catastrophic consequences within the 50-year timeframe requires a four-fifths majority to pass.
Section 2.2: The Global Judicial Tribunal (GJT)
The GJT is the supreme judicial authority on matters of Charter law.
- (a) Composition: The GJT consists of 21 judges, selected to ensure diversity of geographical origin and legal tradition. A permanent, independent Judicial Review Commission shall vet nominees before forwarding a final list to the GGC for confirmation by a two-thirds majority vote in both houses.
- (b) Term and Jurisdiction: Judges serve a single, non-renewable 15-year term. The GJT has ultimate and binding jurisdiction over disputes arising under this Charter, appeals from regional tribunals, and the prosecution of individuals for offenses explicitly defined in this Charter.
- (c) Office of Jurisdictional Mediation. An Office of Jurisdictional Mediation is established under the authority of the Global Judicial Tribunal. The sole mandate of this Office is to provide a forum for non-binding mediation in disputes where the fundamental rights and legal mandates of the Charter are in direct conflict. The GJT may require parties to undergo mediation through this Office before it agrees to hear a case.
- (d) Office of Restorative Justice and Social Reconciliation. An Office of Restorative Justice and Social Reconciliation is established as a sub-body of the Global Judicial Tribunal. This Office will have the mandate to facilitate non-punitive justice processes, including victim-offender mediation, community accountability circles, and programs designed to address the root causes of social harm. For a significant class of non-violent offenses, the GJT is empowered to mandate participation in a restorative process as an alternative to, or prerequisite for, a punitive trial.
- (e) Judicial Oversight of the Auditor. A permanent Judicial Oversight Committee, composed of GJT judges, is established. This committee is empowered to review investigations by the Office of the Global Auditor (OGA) to ensure they do not violate the inherent rights laid out in Article III and to provide a formal process for individuals or states to appeal what they believe is OGA overreach.
Section 2.3: The Global Commons Authority (GCA)
The GCA is the primary executive and regulatory body for planetary stewardship and economic oversight. It is governed by a Board of Directors appointed through the process defined in Sec. 2.7. It is structured into three primary Directorates: for Planetary Trust Management, for Economic Stability, and for Corporate Compliance.
Section 2.4: The Office of the Global Auditor (OGA)
The OGA is an independent fourth branch of governance, serving as the ultimate guarantor of transparency and accountability. The Global Auditor has unrestricted authority and subpoena power to audit the finances, data, algorithms, and operational integrity of all global bodies and chartered corporations. The OGA reports its findings directly and simultaneously to the GGC and the public.
Section 2.5: The Global Security and Crisis Council (GSCC)
The GSCC is the civilian body responsible for monitoring threats to international peace and planetary stability. It facilitates diplomacy, coordinates global crisis response, and provides strategic oversight for the Charter Peace and Response Corps (CPRC). The CPRC's mandate is for crisis response and peacekeeping in failed states or at the request of a Member State. Enforcement of Charter law against a functional state must be primarily economic and diplomatic.
Section 2.6: The Global Electoral Commission (GEC)
The GEC is an independent body responsible for administering all global elections and referendums in a secure, transparent, and impartial manner. Its commissioners are appointed through the process defined in Sec. 2.7.
Section 2.7: Accountability of Independent Bodies
The governing boards and members of the Global Commons Authority (GCA), Global Bioethics Council (GBC), Global Metrics Commission (GMC), Office of Multi-Generational Foresight, and other independent bodies established hereunder shall be appointed through a unified process. A pool of qualified candidates shall be nominated by a Global Nominating Convention, which shall convene every ten years. This Convention will be composed of delegates from accredited and recognized academic, scientific, and professional associations worldwide. Seats at the Convention shall be allocated to these associations with a mandate for regional and developmental balance to prevent domination by any single state or bloc. No single institution may hold a permanent seat. The GGC shall establish the formal bylaws for Convention governance. The final appointments shall be confirmed by a two-thirds majority vote of the GGC.
Section 2.8: Council of Historical Review
An independent body, the Council of Historical Review, is hereby established. It is composed of historians, sociologists, and systems analysts. Every 10 years, this Council will publish a 'Decennial Failure Report,' a mandatory public analysis of past human civilizations and governments, identifying the specific policies, ideologies, and social dynamics that led to their collapse or decline. The GGC must formulate a public, formal response to this report.
Section 2.9: Mandate for Transparent Governance
All proposed legislation must be published with a comprehensive and publicly accessible Evidence Dossier. The Office of the Global Auditor's role in legislative oversight is to audit these dossiers for factual accuracy and the intentional falsification of data. Any official found by the OGA to have engaged in intentional evidence falsification in the execution of their duties shall be subject to censure and removal proceedings by the GJT.
Section 2.10: Mandate for Civic Labor and Grounded Governance
All elected representatives in the Global Governance Council and all members appointed to the highest-level global councils must, as a condition of their service, dedicate a minimum of twenty percent (20%) of their term to direct, non-managerial labor within a Foundational Service sector. This civic labor shall be performed alongside the sector's regular workers. The Office of the Global Auditor will be tasked with verifying compliance.
Article III: Inherent Rights and Dignity
Section 3.1: The Right to Life and Personhood
Every human being possesses an absolute right to life, liberty, and legal personhood from the moment of live birth.
- (a) Right to Sapient Personhood. Legal personhood and all rights guaranteed by this Charter shall be extended not only to human beings but to any entity demonstrating a threshold of sapience, consciousness, or self-awareness, as defined by verifiable criteria established by the Global Bioethics Council. This includes, but is not limited to, biologically-uplifted animals and artificial general intelligences.
- (b) Mandate for Morphological Freedom. Every sapient being possesses the fundamental right to cognitive and morphological freedom. This is the right to alter one's own physical and mental form and functions through technology. The exercise of this right is subject to the harm principle. It shall not be construed to permit actions that, to a high degree of scientific certainty as determined by the Global Bioethics Council, pose a direct and catastrophic existential risk to the biosphere, public health, or the personhood of another sapient being. The GBC's mandate is limited to ensuring informed consent and mitigating such catastrophic risks.
Section 3.2: The Prohibition of Inhuman Acts
Torture, slavery in all its forms, serfdom, enforced disappearances, forced labor, and any cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment are strictly and unconditionally prohibited.
Section 3.3: The Right to Liberty and Due Process
No person shall be deprived of their liberty except following a lawful conviction by a competent and impartial tribunal. Every person is guaranteed the presumption of innocence, the right against self-incrimination, protection from double jeopardy, the right to a fair and public trial, and the right to competent legal representation.
Section 3.4: The Right to Dignity, Privacy, and Cognitive Liberty
- (a) Privacy: The right to personal privacy—in one's body, home, correspondence, and personal data—is inviolable. Warrantless surveillance is prohibited.
- (b) Cognitive Liberty: Every person has the right to the self-determination of their own mental processes. The use of any means to coercively alter or monitor a person's thoughts without their explicit, informed, and revocable consent is prohibited.
- (c) Algorithmic Justice: The use of predictive algorithms for law enforcement profiling or judicial sentencing is prohibited. Any automated decision-making process that significantly affects a person’s rights must be transparent, explainable, and subject to a mandatory right of human review and appeal.
- (d) Right to Homestead Inviolability (Modified). The primary dwelling and a contiguous plot of land of up to one hectare, as registered by an individual, shall be designated an inviolable Homestead. The GCA and its agents may not enter a Homestead without the explicit, uncoerced consent of the owner, nor shall the Homestead be subject to arbitrary dissolution or reclamation. This inviolability does not exempt the Homestead from the universal and proportional application of Charter law, including the levies administered by the Global Commons Authority.
Article IV: The Global Economic & Environmental Framework
Section 4.1: The Right to a Healthy Biosphere
Every person and all future generations have an inalienable right to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment, including clean air, clean water, and a stable climate.
Section 4.2: The Planetary Trust and Global Metrics Commission (GMC)
The global commons shall be held in a legally binding Planetary Trust, administered by the GCA. An independent Global Metrics Commission (GMC) shall identify, monitor, and report on key planetary health metrics.
- (a) Planetary Boundaries: The GMC shall propose quantified, science-based Planetary Boundaries representing the "safe operating limits" for humanity. Upon ratification by a two-thirds majority of the GGC, these Boundaries become binding global law.
Section 4.3: Global Commons and Carbon Levy (GCCL)
The GCA shall administer the GCCL, a globally harmonized levy on the extraction of virgin raw materials and the emission of greenhouse gases. The levy's rate shall be scientifically determined by the GMC based on environmental and social costs. This levy serves as the primary funding mechanism for all functions of this Charter.
Section 4.4: Universal Basic Income and Services (UBIS)
To eliminate poverty and ensure universal dignity, a global social floor is established.
- (a) Universal Basic Income: The GCA shall oversee the provision of a monetary distribution sufficient to meet essential needs for food, water, and shelter.
- (b) Foundational Services: This is supplemented by a universal guarantee of access to comprehensive healthcare, education through the secondary level, and access to the global information network.
Section 4.5: Reparative Justice Tithe
A mandatory, non-negotiable minimum of twenty percent (20%) of the total annual revenue generated by the Global Commons and Carbon Levy shall be directly allocated to the Reparative Justice program within the Global Transition and Resilience Fund. This funding shall be administered by a board where at least half of the members are representatives from nations of the Global South. This allocation cannot be reduced or re-appropriated, even by a supermajority of the GGC.
Section 4.6: Corporate Chartering and Economic Transition
All transnational corporations with annual revenues exceeding a threshold set by the GGC must obtain a Global Corporate Charter from the GCA.
- (a) Social Ownership & Small Enterprise. All corporations holding a Global Corporate Charter must transition to a model of social ownership within 15 years. Such corporations must be reconstituted as either (a) worker-owned cooperatives, or (b) public enterprises managed by the GCA. The mandate for Social Ownership shall apply only to corporations with more than 100 members or annual revenues exceeding 10,000 times the value of the ‘Global Standard of Essential Needs.’ Enterprises smaller than this threshold may remain privately owned.
- (b) Mandate for Democratic Economic Planning. All Public Enterprises managed by the GCA and all worker-owned cooperatives shall be integrated into a system of democratic economic planning. Production targets and resource allocation shall be determined by a nested system of directly-elected worker and consumer councils at the local, regional, and global levels. The GCA's role is to facilitate and execute the democratic will of these councils.
- (c) Fair Resource Allocation Guarantee for Small Enterprise. The framework for Democratic Economic Planning must include a Fair Resource Allocation Guarantee. The GCA shall ensure that the small enterprise sector is allocated the necessary raw materials, energy, and bandwidth to remain viable, at a fair, regulated rate.
Section 4.7: The Knowledge Commons and Global Innovation Fund (GIF)
All scientific research substantially funded by global public bodies shall be published open-access. Patents on life-saving medicines, essential agricultural technologies, and foundational green technologies are prohibited. In their place, the Global Innovation Fund (GIF), funded by the GCCL, will issue substantial prizes, grants, and other incentives to promote research and development in these areas, ensuring critical innovations serve the public good.
Section 4.8: Limitation on Extreme Wealth Accumulation
To ensure political equality and social cohesion, a global maximum wealth cap is established. No individual may hold assets exceeding 1,000 times the capitalized value of the annual Global Standard of Essential Needs. All assets exceeding this limit shall be reclaimed by the GCA and redistributed through the Global Transition and Resilience Fund.
Section 4.9: Abolition of Involuntary Death Initiative
The GCA shall establish and fund a new primary body, the Directorate for Existential Viability, with a singular and primary mandate: the elimination of involuntary death from biological aging and disease. This Directorate shall be funded annually at a level no less than that of the Directorate for Planetary Trust Management. All resulting life-extension therapies shall be provided as a Foundational Service under the UBIS.
Section 4.10: Mandate for the Progressive Automation and Liberation from Toil
The Democratic Economic Planning councils are mandated to prioritize the progressive automation of all labor that is dangerous, repetitive, physically burdensome, or otherwise undesirable. The primary goal of this mandate is the systematic elimination of involuntary toil. All productivity gains resulting from automation shall be socialized as a progressively decreasing necessary work week, increased leisure time, and an enhanced Universal Basic Income.
Section 4.11: The Three Pillars Endowment Framework
- (a) All revenue from the Global Commons and Carbon Levy (GCCL) shall be considered capital
of the global commons. This capital shall be proportionally allocated to three co-equal but
separate global trusts, known as the Three Pillars:
- (i) The Gaia Trust (Stewardship): Mandated to fund the GCA's environmental work and invest in planetary-scale ecological regeneration. Its governance shall include leading earth systems scientists and representatives of indigenous peoples.
- (ii) The Demos Trust (Dignity): Mandated to provide for the stable, perpetual funding of the Universal Basic Income and Services (UBIS). Its governance shall include proportional representation from all six recognized regions, including the Transnational Region.
- (iii) The Novus Trust (Progress): Mandated to fund high-risk, long-term civilizational initiatives, including the Abolition of Involuntary Death Initiative and the Global Innovation Fund (GIF).
- (b) The Dynamic Symbiosis Clause: The work of the Three Pillars shall be linked by the
following constitutional feedback loop:
- (i) Negative Feedback (The Throttle): The GBC shall, in conjunction with the GMC, define a series of biospheric stability metrics. Should these metrics fall below a defined critical threshold, the charter and funding for high-risk projects of the Novus Trust shall be automatically and proportionally restricted until such time as the metrics return to a stable state.
- (ii) Positive Feedback (The Tithe): A mandatory tithe of ten percent (10%) of all net positive returns from the Novus Trust's investments shall be transferred directly to the capital base of the Gaia Trust, creating a direct fiscal incentive for Progress to fund Stewardship.
Article V: Information, Truth, and Education
Section 5.1: The Right to Verifiable Information and Education
- (a) The Global Information Integrity Council (GIIC). To protect the right to verifiable information, a Global Information Integrity Council is established. This independent body shall not rule on the truthfulness of content. Its sole mandate is to develop and promote open-source protocols for media authentication, source verification, identification of coordinated inauthentic behavior (e.g., bot networks), and clear labeling of AI-generated content.
- (b) The Mandate for a Competency-Based Pedagogy
- (i) The Neutral Framework: The Independent Global Council for Education is mandated to establish a Core Competency Framework, not a content-specific curriculum.
- (ii) Restricted Domain: The global authority is constitutionally restricted to
mandating standards only in the following Universal Domains:
- Hard Sciences: Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, and Ecological Systems Science.
- Information Literacy: The technical skills required to verify sources, identify algorithmic bias, and authenticate digital media (in alignment with Section 5.1(a)).
- Civics of the Charter: The mechanical study of the Rights, Responsibilities, and Legal Structures of this Charter.
- (iii) Prohibition of Ideological Mandates: The Global Council is constitutionally prohibited from mandating specific historical narratives, political ideologies, or moral frameworks (including "anti-imperialism" or "cooperative ethics"). The teaching of History, Arts, Ethics, and Social Studies is reserved exclusively to the Local and Regional Educational Authorities (The 100% Reservation Clause).
- (iv) The Right to Educational Pluralism: No parent shall be compelled to send their child to a state-run institution. The Global Dividend (UBIS) shall include an Educational Voucher valid at any accredited institution—Public, Cooperative, or Private—provided that institution demonstrates compliance with the Hard Science and Information Literacy standards defined in clause (ii).
Section 5.2: Prohibition of Systematic Information-Based Harm
This is a prosecutable offense under the jurisdiction of the GJT, defined by the strict conjunction of criteria including the large-scale dissemination of information known by the disseminator to be demonstrably false with malicious intent to incite mass violence, subvert core democratic processes, or cause a widespread public health crisis.
Article VI: Global Security and Enforcement
Section 6.1: The Charter Peace and Response Corps (CPRC)
The CPRC is the sole security and crisis response instrument of the global commons. It is a professional force composed of volunteers who swear an oath to this Charter, with a mandate for crisis response and peacekeeping. It has three distinct branches:
- (a) Peacekeeping Branch: Enforces GJT warrants and maintains peace in post-conflict zones.
- (b) Humanitarian Aid Branch: Delivers aid and coordinates logistics in response to disasters.
- (c) Environmental Enforcement Branch: Secures and protects designated global commons.
Section 6.2: Mandate for Intervention and Enforcement
- (a) The Restorative Path (Default): Before the GCA may levy a Dynamic Sanctions Tariff or the GGC may authorize economic severance against a non-compliant state, the case must first be formally referred to the Office of Restorative Justice and Social Reconciliation for a mandatory, time-bound period of facilitated mediation between the parties. Enforcement actions may only proceed upon a formal declaration from the Office that the restorative process has failed
- (b) The Security Path (Crisis Exception): The mandatory mediation period in Section 6.2(a) may be bypassed if, and only if, the Global Metrics Commission formally certifies an "immediate, ongoing, and catastrophic threat to the biosphere" resulting from the actions of the non-compliant state. Upon such a certification, the GGC may, by a four-fifths supermajority vote, proceed directly to a vote on enforcement actions.
- (c) The Two-Key Prerequisite for Kinetic Enforcement:
- (i) Universal Scope: The GGC is constitutionally prohibited from authorizing the deployment of the CPRC in any capacity that involves non-consensual entry into sovereign territory or the use of kinetic force, regardless of whether the justification is humanitarian, environmental, or security-related, unless...
- (ii) Harmonized Keys:
- Key 1 (Judicial/Scientific Warrant): A formal finding by the GJT (for human rights) OR a certified finding by the GMC (for environmental threats) that a severe violation is occurring.
- Key 2 (Auditory Verification): The Office of the Global Auditor (OGA) must verify that the state in question is materially complicit in the violation or has refused reasonable offers of peaceful technical assistance to resolve the crisis.”
Article VII: Ratification and Entry into Force
Section 7.1: Charter of Association
A two-tiered system for adoption is established:
- (a) Associated States: Nations that agree to be bound only by Article IV (Economic & Environmental Framework). They shall pay the Global Commons and Carbon Levy (GCCL) and adhere to Planetary Boundaries in exchange for access to the Global Transition and Resilience Fund and a voice in the Council of Regions.
- (b) Member States: Nations that fully ratify this Charter in its entirety, gaining full rights and responsibilities, including voting representation in the Assembly of Representatives.
Article VIII: Amendment and Review
Section 8.1: Amendment Process
An amendment may be proposed by a one-third vote of either house of the GGC or by a global petition signed by 3% of the global electorate. It must be passed by a three-fourths majority of both houses of the GGC and subsequently ratified by a two-thirds majority in a global referendum. The rights defined in Article III may not be diminished by amendment, only expanded.
Section 8.2: Charter Review Convention
Every 40 years, a global referendum shall automatically be held on whether to convene a Global Charter Convention for comprehensive review.
Section 8.3: Charter Stability and Review Act (Modified)
A Global Referendum to suspend any single amendment passed after the initial ratification of this Charter can be initiated by a petition signed by 5% of the global electorate. If the referendum passes by a two-thirds majority, the amendment in question is suspended for a period of five years. During this period, the Office of the Global Auditor will conduct a comprehensive impact assessment. At the end of five years, a second referendum will be held to determine if the amendment should be permanently repealed or reinstated.
Article IX: Transitional Provisions
Section 9.1: Preparatory Commission
Upon ratification by states representing 25% of the global population, a Preparatory Commission shall be formed. This Commission will be tasked with drafting the initial operational bylaws for all global bodies, establishing the Global Electoral Commission, and creating a detailed, 15-year phased implementation plan. For the purposes of the initial election for the Assembly of Representatives, the term 'Member States' shall refer to all nations that have fully ratified this Charter by the date set forth by the Preparatory Commission, which shall be no later than one year following the Charter's initial entry into force.
Section 9.2: Phased Implementation
The implementation of the Charter shall be phased to ensure stability. The scientific and economic bodies (GMC, GBC, GCA) shall be established first, followed by the political and judicial bodies (GGC, GJT), and finally the security framework (GSCC, CPRC).
Section 9.3: Initial Funding
The work of the Preparatory Commission and the initial operational costs of all global bodies established hereunder, prior to the collection of the GCCL, shall be funded by contributions from ratifying states. These initial contributions will be assessed proportionally to each state's historical Gross Domestic Product and will be considered a credit against their future obligations under the GCCL.
Amendment I: The Subsidiarity Shield Amendment
Preamble
This amendment is hereby established to affirm and give substantive power to the principle of Subsidiarity as defined in Article I, Section 1.1 of this Charter. It is designed to ensure that the application of global law remains responsive, adaptable, and accountable to local communities, creating a collaborative rather than a purely hierarchical relationship between the global and local scales of governance.
Section I: Invocation of the Shield
1.1: Any local or regional governance body of a Member State may formally invoke the Subsidiarity Shield in response to a specific directive or enforcement action by the Global Commons Authority (GCA).
1.2: The invocation of the Shield must be initiated by a formal, verifiable petition signed by no less than five percent (5%) of the eligible electorate within a given governance body's jurisdiction.
1.3: Upon certification of the petition by the Global Electoral Commission, the petition must be formally ratified by a simple majority vote of the relevant local or regional governance body in a public session. The invocation of the Shield is only considered valid upon the successful conclusion of this ratifying vote.
Section 2: The Stay and Review Mandate
2.1: Upon a valid invocation of the Shield, the GCA directive in question is immediately and automatically placed under a Stay and Review order, pausing its implementation and enforcement within that specific jurisdiction for a period of one (1) standard year.
2.2: A Joint Review Commission shall be immediately convened. This Commission shall be composed of:
- (a) Delegates appointed by the petitioning local or regional governance body.
- (b) Representatives from the relevant Directorate of the GCA.
- (c) A single, neutral facilitator from the Office of Jurisdictional Mediation.
2.3: The sole mandate of this Commission is to collaboratively design and agree upon a modified or alternative method of implementation that both achieves the original directive's stated planetary goal (e.g., adherence to a Planetary Boundary) and is compatible with the local jurisdiction's unique ecological, economic, and cultural conditions.
2.4: If the Commission reaches a consensus within the one-year period, the resulting modified plan shall be adopted as the binding implementation for that jurisdiction.
2.5: If the Commission fails to reach a consensus, the matter shall then be formally referred to the Global Judicial Tribunal (GJT) for a final, binding ruling.
Section 3: Special Provisions
3.1: Planetary Crisis Override: The Stay and Review order is subject to a Planetary Crisis Override. Upon a formal certification by the Global Metrics Commission (GMC) of an immediate, ongoing, and catastrophic threat to the biosphere requiring urgent action, the Global Governance Council (GGC) may, by a four-fifths supermajority vote in both houses, override the stay and authorize immediate enforcement of the original directive.
3.2: Protection of Vulnerable Groups: The neutral facilitator assigned to any Joint Review Commission is constitutionally mandated to ensure the procedural and substantive rights of minority and marginalized groups within the petitioning jurisdiction are protected throughout the review process. If the facilitator finds that a proposed local solution would disproportionately harm such groups, they are empowered to file a specific injunction with the GJT, which will be considered in any final adjudication.
Amendment II: The Charter of the Unenfranchised Amendment
Preamble
To rectify the omission of stateless, refugee, and unenfranchised populations from the Charter's original representative framework, and to affirm a foundational layer of universal human citizenship, this amendment is hereby ordained. It establishes the principle that a person's inalienable rights, including the right to a political voice and economic dignity, are not contingent upon their status within a Member State.
Section 1: The Transnational Constituency and the Status of Associated Person
1.1 Definition: A new, non-geographical political body, to be known as the Transnational Region, is hereby established as the sixth recognized region of the Global Charter.
1.2 Eligibility: Any person who is verifiably stateless, a registered refugee, or an internally displaced person without effective state protection is eligible to voluntarily register as a member of this region.
1.3 Associated Personhood: Upon successful registration, an individual is granted the legal status of Associated Person of the Global Charter.
Section 2: Political and Legal Representation
2.1 Legislative Representation: The Transnational Constituency shall be granted representation in the Assembly of Representatives, with the number of representatives determined proportionally to its registered population, identical to the standard for Member States. Elections shall be administered by the GEC.
2.2 Executive and Judicial Rights: Duly elected representatives of the Transnational Constituency shall be granted:
- (a) Automatic, ex-officio, voting seats on the governing boards of all global bodies directly pertinent to their constituency's welfare, including the Global Security and Crisis Council (GSCC) and all directorates of the Global Commons Authority (GCA) that administer Foundational Services.
- (b) Special legal standing to bring cases and petitions directly before the Global Judicial Tribunal (GJT) on behalf of their constituency or any registered Associated Person.
Section 3: Phased Economic and Social Integration
The integration of Associated Persons into the Universal Basic Income and Services (UBIS) program shall be phased to ensure systemic stability. The process shall be bound by the following three-phase protocol:
- 3.1 Phase 1 (Years 1-3 Post-Ratification): Foundational Support. Upon registration, all Associated Persons shall receive immediate and full access to all non-monetary Foundational Services, including comprehensive healthcare, access to the global education network, and secure digital identity and communication services. The focus of this phase is on registration and the provision of immediate, life-sustaining support.
- 3.2 Phase 2 (Years 4-7 Post-Ratification): Transitional UBI. As the Global Commons and Carbon Levy (GCCL) revenue stream stabilizes, Associated Persons will be integrated into the monetary Universal Basic Income (UBI) system in managed tranches. The GCA Directorate for Economic Stability, in consultation with the Transnational Constituency's representatives, shall determine the size and priority of these tranches, with an initial focus on the most vulnerable populations.
- 3.3 Phase 3 (Year 8 onward): Full Integration. Contingent upon a formal certification from the Office of the Global Auditor (OGA) that the GCCL system is stable and capable of bearing the full load, all registered Associated Persons shall become full recipients of the complete UBIS program, achieving economic parity with citizens of Member States.
Amendment III: Regulatory Framework for Morphological Freedom
Preamble
To ensure a just and stable balance between the right to Morphological Freedom and the absolute right to life for all present and future generations, this interpretive amendment is established. It provides the binding regulatory framework for the application of the harm principle, ensuring that the level of oversight is proportional to the level of risk. The Global Bioethics Council (GBC) is hereby mandated to implement and oversee this framework.
Section 1: The Tiered Regulatory Framework for Morphological Freedom
All technologies and procedures related to the right to alter one's physical and mental form shall be classified into one of the following three tiers:
1.1 Tier 1: Personal Augmentation.
- (a) Scope: This tier includes all reversible and non-heritable modifications. Examples include, but are not limited to, cybernetic prosthetics, neural interfaces, sensory enhancements, and somatic cell therapies.
- (b) Regulation: Tier 1 modifications are considered an exercise of personal liberty. They are subject only to regulations from the Global Commons Authority (GCA) concerning medical safety and the assurance of fully informed consent.
1.2 Tier 2: Major Individual Modification.
- (a) Scope: This tier includes all irreversible but non-heritable modifications. Examples include, but are not limited to, significant and permanent changes to an individual's morphology and non-heritable, deep-level cellular or genetic therapies.
- (b) Regulation (The "Delegated License" Model):
- (i) Practitioner Certification: Tier 2 procedures may only be performed by clinics or practitioners holding a specialized Morphological Proficiency License issued by the Global Bioethics Council (GBC).
- (ii) Decentralized Review: The authority to certify an individual's physical safety and psychological readiness for the procedure is delegated to the licensed practitioner. The practitioner is legally mandated to adhere to the standardized "Informed Consent & Stability Protocols" established by the GBC.
- (iii) The Audit Shield: To prevent malpractice, the GBC shall maintain an Algorithmic Audit of all Tier 2 procedures. Any practitioner whose patient outcomes show a statistical anomaly of harm or regret shall be subject to immediate license suspension and investigation.
1.3 Tier 3: Transgenerational & Systemic Risk.
- (a) Scope: This tier includes all heritable (germline) genetic modifications and all technologies with the potential for exponential self-replication or unforeseen systemic interaction with the biosphere.
- (b) The "Presumption of Caution": All Tier 3 procedures are presumptively suspended. This suspension is not a permanent ban, but a high barrier that mandates a rigorous judicial validation process before any specific genetic alteration can be introduced into the human gene pool.
- (c) The Certification Process: To overcome the presumption of suspension, a petitioner must
seek a "Writ of Evolutionary Necessity" from the Global Judicial Tribunal (GJT). The burden
of proof lies entirely on the petitioner to demonstrate, via clear and convincing evidence,
that:
- Safety: The modification has achieved a unanimous consensus of safety from the Global Metrics Commission (GMC).
- Therapeutic Necessity: The modification eliminates a clear and present biological defect or suffering.
- The Equality Standard: The modification does not create an irreversible biological caste system, confer an unfair socioeconomic advantage, or fundamentally fracture the unity of the human species.
- (d) The Final Verdict: The GJT shall issue a ruling based on these arguments. A favorable ruling acts as a Specific License for that precise genetic alteration only. It does not set a blanket precedent for other modifications; the argument for "Good" must be fought and won anew for every distinct change to the genome.
Amendment IV: Universal Dividend
Section 4.4: Universal Dividend and Foundational Services
To eliminate poverty and ensure universal dignity, a global social floor is established, composed of Foundational Services and a Universal Dividend.
- (a) Foundational Services: A universal guarantee of access to comprehensive healthcare, education through the secondary level, and access to the global information network shall be provided to all persons.
- (b) The Universal Dividend: A monetary distribution, known as the Universal Dividend, shall
be provided to all persons to meet essential needs. The funding and distribution of this
Dividend shall be governed by a dynamic, multi-faceted mechanism to ensure perpetual
financial stability, predictability, and ethical alignment:
- (i) Phase 1 - Revenue-Based Distribution: Prior to the Demos Trust achieving a state
of financial maturation as certified by the Office of the Global Auditor (OGA), the
Universal Dividend shall be funded directly by the Global Commons and Carbon Levy
(GCCL). The net annual revenue of the GCCL shall be allocated as follows:
- 1. A fixed, non-negotiable forty percent (40%) shall fund the direct, annual Universal Dividend payout.
- 2. A fixed, non-negotiable ten percent (10%) shall be deposited into a Dividend Stabilization Fund. The explicit purpose of this fund is to buffer the annual dividend against revenue volatility. The GGC shall establish regulations for its use to supplement payouts during low-revenue years, ensuring a predictable and stable social floor.
- (ii) To prevent a collapse in the standard of living during the transition
period—specifically in the event that GCCL revenues decline due to successful
decarbonization before the Demos Trust is fully capitalized—a binding floor is
established.
- Trigger: If the projected annual Universal Dividend falls below the "Global Standard of Essential Needs" (as defined by the GMC) for two consecutive quarters while still in Phase 1.
- Obligation: Member States are legally obligated to bridge the funding gap. This contribution shall be assessed proportionally based on each State's GDP and total accumulated historical carbon emissions.
- Enforcement: Failure to meet this assessment constitutes a violation of Article IV, authorizing the Global Commons Authority (GCA) to withhold "Global Innovation Fund" grants and "Fair Resource Allocation" credits from the non-compliant State until the debt is serviced.
- (iii) Phase 2 - Endowment-Based Distribution: Upon certification of maturation by the OGA, the Universal Dividend shall be funded by the annual investment returns of the Demos Trust. The GGC shall, by a majority vote, set the annual dividend rate as a percentage of the Trust's returns, with the goal of progressively increasing the dividend in line with the Trust's sustainable growth.
- (iv) Ethical Investment Mandate: The Demos Trust shall operate under a binding Ethical Investment Mandate. This mandate, to be drafted into law by the GGC and enforced by the OGA, shall prohibit investment in activities contrary to the principles of this Charter and require proactive investment in enterprises that promote ecological regeneration and social equity.
- (v) Regenerative Bonus: The GGC may, by a majority vote, designate a portion of the annual dividend pool to be distributed as a supplementary Regenerative Bonus, conditional upon the global community meeting specific, independently-verified targets for biosphere restoration and sustainability.
- (i) Phase 1 - Revenue-Based Distribution: Prior to the Demos Trust achieving a state
of financial maturation as certified by the Office of the Global Auditor (OGA), the
Universal Dividend shall be funded directly by the Global Commons and Carbon Levy
(GCCL). The net annual revenue of the GCCL shall be allocated as follows:
Amendment V: Chartered Enterprises
Section 4.6: Corporate Chartering and the Chartered Enterprise Path
To achieve a just and sustainable global economy, the long-term goal of this Charter is to foster a transition toward economic models based on social ownership and democratic governance, such as worker-owned cooperatives and public enterprises. The Chartered Enterprise Path is established as the primary, pragmatic, and stable means to achieve this structural transformation over time.
All transnational corporations with annual revenues exceeding a threshold set by the GGC must obtain a Global Corporate Charter from the GCA.
- (a) Chartered Enterprise Status: A corporation holding a Global Corporate Charter may voluntarily apply to the GCA for designation as a Chartered Enterprise by reconstituting its ownership structure as either (i) a worker-owned cooperative, or (ii) a public enterprise managed by the GCA.
- (b) Incentives for Transition: Upon certification by the OGA, a Chartered Enterprise shall
be granted significant and progressively increasing advantages, including:
- (i) Preferential allocation of resources under the Fair Resource Allocation Guarantee.
- (ii) Priority eligibility for grants and incentives from the Global Innovation Fund (GIF).
- (iii) A tiered reduction in their assessed rate for the Global Commons and Carbon Levy (GCCL). This reduction shall be subject to a scheduled Incentive Ratchet Mechanism, established by the GGC, designed to systematically increase the financial advantages of Chartered Enterprise status over time. The GGC may also designate Priority Transition Sectors that will be subject to an accelerated ratchet.
- (c) Mandatory Charter Alignment Plan: Irrespective of their decision to pursue Chartered Enterprise status, all corporations holding a Global Corporate Charter must, within five years of this Charter's ratification, develop and publish a detailed Charter Alignment Plan. This plan, to be updated every five years and subject to independent audit by the OGA, must transparently report on the corporation's progress in aligning its global operations with the Charter’s principles concerning labor rights, environmental impact, and fair market practices.
Amendment VI: Accession Protocol
Section 7.1: Tiered Accession Protocol
A three-tiered system for adoption is established to foster broad and progressive engagement with this Charter.
- (a) Tier 1: Signatory Ally. A nation may become a Signatory Ally by formally ratifying only Article I: Foundational Principles. Signatory Allies are granted non-voting observer status in the GGC and access to the Office of Jurisdictional Mediation to foster dialogue and cooperation. They hold no further rights or obligations.
- (b) Tier 2: Associated State. A nation may be designated an Associated State upon
ratification of the Charter's Core Pillars. This shall include:
- (i) Article I: Foundational Principles
- (ii) Article II: Universal Rights and Dignity
- (iii) Article III: Global Justice and the Rule of Law
- (iv) Article IV: Economic & Environmental Framework
- (v) Article V, Section 5.3: Rights of the Unenfranchised
- (c) Tier 3: Member State. A nation that fully ratifies this Charter in its entirety shall be designated a Member State, gaining all rights and responsibilities herein, including full voting representation in the GGC.
Amendment VII: Fast Track
Section 2.1(d): The Consensus-Driven Fast Track
To balance legislative efficiency with rigorous oversight, a fast-track procedure is established.
- (i) Invocation: Legislation may be placed on the fast track if it meets two prerequisites:
- (1) It is introduced with the formal co-sponsorship of no less than seventy percent (70%) of the members of both houses of the GGC, and
- (2) The mandatory Long-Term Viability Assessment (LTVA) concludes with a strongly positive or neutral outlook.
- (ii) Procedure: Legislation on the fast track shall be prioritized for floor debate and may bypass certain intermediary procedural delays. This procedure shall not, under any circumstances, bypass the mandatory attachment of the full LTVA report or the OGA's audit of the Evidence Dossier.
- (iii) Deliberative Review Trigger: The fast-track procedure shall be immediately suspended for a period of thirty (30) days if a Dissenting Analysis is formally co-sponsored by at least twenty percent (20%) of the members of either house of the GGC. The Dissenting Analysis must identify a specific, un-modeled risk or a substantive flaw in the assumptions of the attached LTVA. Upon invocation, the Dissenting Analysis shall be subject to an immediate and public review by the Office of Multi-Generational Foresight and the Office of the Global Auditor, whose findings shall be published prior to the resumption of debate.
Amendment VIII: Economic Stability
Section 4.12: Transitional Economic Stability Mandate
(a) Declaration of Economic Emergency: The GGC may, by a two-thirds supermajority vote in both houses, declare a state of Transitional Economic Emergency for a period not to exceed 180 days. Such a declaration may be renewed by the same process. The GGC must, in its first legislative session, pass an enabling act that provides clear, objective criteria for what constitutes such an emergency.
(b) Emergency Powers of the Directorate for Economic Stability: Only upon the formal declaration of an emergency, the GCA's Directorate for Economic Stability is hereby granted temporary authority to implement targeted capital controls and other measures necessary to prevent systemic financial instability.
(c) The "Sunset" and Validation Protocol (The "Liberty Default"): Any asset seizure, freeze, or capital control measure implemented under this authority is subject to a Mandatory 48-Hour Sunset.
- * (i) Automatic Expiration: The measure shall automatically expire and be rendered void 48 hours after issuance unless strictly validated by an affirmative vote from the Standing Auditor's Jury (Amendment XIII).
- * (ii) The "Status Quo Ante" Shield: During the 48-hour provisional period, and for the duration of any subsequent validation, all private legal and financial obligations of the targeted entity are legally paused. No interest shall accrue, no defaults may be triggered, and no collateral may be seized by private or public parties.
- * (iii) Liability: If the Jury refuses to validate the measure, or if it expires without a vote, the Global Commons Authority is strictly liable for 100% of any reputational or material damages incurred by the target.
(d) Prohibition of Serial Targeting (The "Anti-Chain" Clause): If a provisional measure expires without Jury validation, or is explicitly rejected by the Jury, the GGC and its agencies are constitutionally prohibited from targeting the same entity or freezing the same assets for a period of 90 days, unless a separate indictment is authorized by a majority vote of the Global Judicial Tribunal.
Amendment IX: Civic Resilience
Section 5.3: Civic Resilience & Deliberation Mandate
To empower the global community to resist the harms of systematic disinformation and to foster social cohesion, the following mandate is established.
- (a) Global Civic Resilience Fund: A permanent fund is established, capitalized by a fixed percentage of the Demos Trust's annual returns. This fund shall operate as a grant-making institution to support voluntary, community-led initiatives.
- (b) Support for Voluntary Public Deliberation: The fund shall provide financing and resources—including optional facilitator training from the Office of Restorative Justice and Social Reconciliation—to local communities or organizations within Member States that voluntarily choose to establish public deliberation forums.
- (c) Decentralized Educational Mandate: The Global Council for Education is mandated to develop and maintain an open-source Core Competency Framework for critical thought and media literacy. The Resilience Fund shall provide grants to regional and local educational authorities to design and implement their own culturally relevant curricula that meet the standards of this framework.
Amendment X: Human Flourishing
Section 2.1(e): Council for Human Flourishing & Qualitative Foresight
- (i) Establishment: An independent advisory body, the Council for Human Flourishing, is hereby established. Its members shall be drawn from diverse fields of the humanities and social sciences.
- (ii) Mandate: For any legislation involving major technological or social transitions, this Council is mandated to produce a Qualitative Foresight Report. This report shall analyze the probable impacts of the legislation on psycho-social well-being, cultural integrity, and the conditions for a meaningful human existence.
- (iii) Advisory Power: This report shall be purely advisory. Its findings shall not have the authority to trigger a supermajority vote or otherwise legally encumber the legislative process. However, the full, unredacted report must be attached to the legislation, and its public discussion shall be a mandatory part of all subsequent deliberations.
Amendment XI: Global Levies (LVT/FTT)
Section 4.13: The Global Land Stewardship Levy (LVT)
Recognizing that the surface of the Earth is a finite resource and part of the Common Heritage of Humanity, a levy is established to discourage speculative land hoarding and ensure the equitable sharing of natural wealth.
- (a) The Levy Base: The Global Commons Authority (GCA) shall administer a levy on the unimproved site value of land. Assessments shall be conducted by local bodies utilizing a globally standardized methodology audited by the Office of the Global Auditor (OGA). Deviations exceeding defined statistical tolerances shall trigger automatic review.
- (b) Dynamic Homestead Exemption: In accordance with Article III, Section 3.4(d), the primary residential plot of an individual shall be exempt from this levy. To ensure equity across diverse economic zones, this exemption shall be capped at the median land value for a standard residential entitlement within the local bioregion, as calculated by the Global Metrics Commission (GMC).
- (c) Revenue Allocation: Revenues generated shall be designated for the Demos Trust to support the Universal Basic Income and Services (UBIS).
Section 4.14: The Global Financial Stability Levy (FTT)
To curb the destabilizing effects of predatory speculation and to recover social value from the financial sector, a Global Financial Stability Levy is established.
- (a) Scope: A fractional levy shall be applied to all wholesale financial transactions, including equity, bond, currency, derivative, and digital asset settlements.
- (b) The Predatory Latency Escalator: The levy rate shall be dynamic. The GCA is empowered to apply a progressively punitive rate on trading activities identified by the OGA as "Predatory Latency Arbitrage." Criteria for this classification shall include excessive order-to-trade ratios (quote stuffing), millisecond-duration holding periods, and other non-productive, volatility-inducing behaviors. Legitimate market-making activities shall be exempt from the escalator.
- (c) Digital Asset Compliance: Any decentralized financial network or digital asset that prevents the collection of this levy shall be designated "Non-Compliant" and barred from integration with the banking systems of Member States.
Section 4.15: Mandate for International Tax Harmonization (Global Value Contribution)
To end base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS), the tax systems of Member States shall be harmonized.
- (a) The Destination-Based Standard: Member States are mandated to transition their corporate tax codes to a Destination-Based Cash Flow model, structured as an indirect tax on business surplus to ensure compliance with international trade norms.
- (b) Core Principles:
- (i) Destination Principle: Liability is determined by the location of the consumer.
- (ii) Border Neutrality: To mimic the mechanics of a Value-Added Tax (VAT), exports shall be zero-rated and imports shall be subject to the levy.
- (c) Small Enterprise Safe Harbor: To minimize administrative burden, enterprises with annual revenues below a threshold set by the GCA shall be exempt from the destination-based requirement and may remain on a simplified domestic income tax schedule.
Amendment XII: Constructive Dissent
Section 1: The Compliance Bond
1.1 Mandate: Any local or regional governance body petitioning to invoke the Subsidiarity Shield must deposit a Compliance Bond with the Global Judicial Tribunal (GJT).
1.2 Valuation & Hardship Waiver: The value of this bond shall be set by the Global Commons Authority (GCA) at ten percent (10%) of the estimated implementation cost.
- To ensure equitable access, jurisdictions with a GDP per capita below the Global Median shall be eligible for a Progressive Hardship Waiver, reducing the bond requirement to a nominal sum as determined by the Office of Jurisdictional Mediation.
1.3 Forfeiture: The bond is returned upon successful conclusion of the review or forfeited to the Gaia Trust in cases of proven "Bad Faith Obstruction."
Section 2: The Binary Choice Sunset
2.1 Expiration: If no consensus is reached within one year, the "Stay and Review" expires.
2.2 Mandatory Referendum: A binding Binary Referendum is held.
2.3 Ballot Options:
- (Option A): Compliance with the Global Directive.
- (Option B): Adoption of the "Best Alternative Compliance Plan." Option B shall be co-drafted by the petitioning body and the Office of Jurisdictional Mediation to ensure it is a viable, good-faith alternative.
Amendment XIII: Auditor's Jury (The "Watchmen's Watch")
Section 1: The Citizen Oversight Jury
1.1 Establishment: An independent body of 500 citizens selected via stratified global sortition.
1.2 Service: Mandatory, one-year term, compensated at triple the Global Standard.
1.3 Technical Secretariat: The Jury shall be supported by a non-voting Technical Secretariat composed of independent data scientists, ethicists, and legal scholars, whose sole mandate is to interpret complex technical data for the Jury without influencing their verdict.
Section 2: Powers and Mandate
2.1 Audit: Power to audit OGA algorithms for bias.
2.2 Censure: Power to Censure politically motivated or vexatious investigations.
2.3 Termination: A Censured investigation is immediately terminated.
2.4 Recall Authority: To ensure stability, a global recall vote for the Lead Global Auditor is triggered only if the Jury issues five (5) Censures within a single term, or by a unanimous vote of the Jury regarding a single egregious violation.
Amendment XIV: Dignity in Place
Section 1: The Deferral Entitlement
1.1 Eligibility: Natural persons over age 60 or permanently disabled may elect "Dignity Deferral" status for their primary residence.
1.2 Scope: Applies to LVT assessments exceeding the Homestead Exemption.
Section 2: The Lien Mechanism
2.1 Accrual: Levies are recorded as a secured lien against the property title rather than collected annually.
2.2 Interest: Accrues simple interest pegged to global inflation.
2.3 Settlement: Due only upon sale, transfer (non-spouse), or death.
2.4 Guarantee of Tenure: The GCA is constitutionally prohibited from forcing the sale of a primary residence held by a Deferral Entitlement holder.
This is the full Canonical Text of the Global Charter of Collective Stewardship.
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