Global Movement to Help main listing:
- Global Constitution
- The Federation of Global Governments vs the United Nations
- Annual meeting of the Federation of Global Governments
- A just, fair and most needed Global Government
- Federation of Global Governments Head Quarters (HQ)
- Essential services
- Global Justice Network
- Global Protection Agency (GPA)
- Global Rights
- Portal of Global Community (original Portal from back in 1985)
- Portal Global Dialogue 2009
- Global Information Media (GIM) daily proclamations concerning actual issues in the world
- Portal of Global Dialogue 2008
- Proceedings of the Global Dialogue
- Global Peace Movement amongst nations and people
- Global Citizens voting on issues
- The Federation of Global Governments vs the United Nations
- Civil Society
- Global Protection Agency (GPA)
- The Judiciary
- Global Ministries
- Essential services
[ Global Parliament ]
[ Earth Government Global Law ]
[ The Global Constitution ]
[ Federation Advisory Board ]
[ Activities of the Global Community ]
[ Member Nations ]
[ Portal of Global Community of North America ]
[ Ratification of the Global Constitution ]
[ Recommendations to humanity ]
[ GGNA ]
[ GGNA schematic ]
[ Global Parliament schematic ]
[ GCNA ]
[ GGs ]
[ Global Constitution ]
[ Welcome to the GGNA ]
[ Global Parliament history ]
[ Global Citizens Act ]
[ Global Law ]
[ Global Environment Ministry ]
[ Global ministries ]
[ Council of Global Ministers ]
[ "We the Peoples" are us
]
[ Global Politics & Justice News ]
[ Global Community Web Net ]
[ Global Dialogue 2007 scripted ]
[ Global Dialogue 2007 not scripted ]
[ Agency of Global Police ]
[ Global Protection Agency (GPA) ]
[ Portal of the Global Civilization ]
[ Global Data Measurement and Assessment ]
[ Global Justice for all life ]
[ Portal of Global Community ]
[ Global Dialogue 2008 ]
[ Who owns the Earth? ]
[ Global Community Information Media (GIM) ]
[ Proceedings of the Global Dialogue ]
[ Participate in roundtables on Who owns the Earth ? ]
[ Participate in Group Discussion by email on Who owns the Earth ? ]
[ Canada sovereignty of Nunavut, Northwest Passage, blood resources ]
[ Global referendumVote now ]
[ Global Community Peace Movement website ]
[ Scale of Global Rights ]
Global Governments
We can do better united as a Global Government :
a new world to build, and a future to share and protect together.
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The website of the Global Government of North America ( GGNA ) is certainly a good example of a type of Global Government.
We can do better together as friends and united as a Global Government
- we are now, and we are the future -
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We, citizens of Global Community of North America, hereby resolve to establish
the Global Government of North America (GGNA) to govern in accordance with the Global Constitution.
Reflecting the will of Global Community of North America citizens and all Member Nations of the GGNA to build a common future,
this Global Constitution establishes Global Government of North America,
on which Member Nations confer competences to attain objectives
they have in common. The GGNA shall coordinate the policies
by which Member Nations aim to achieve these objectives.
The Peoples of Global Community of North America elect, nominate or appoint their representatives to the GGNA.
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Candidates to the House of Elected Representatives are
elected democratically. An elected official will represent his or her community at both levels of government:
1. the GGNA House of Elected Representatives, and
2. the Global Parliament House of Elected Representatives or General Assembly.
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Candidates to the House of Advisers are nominated by teachers, students, or professional organizations
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Candidates to the GGNA Federation are elected or appointed by Member Nations:
Canada, United States, Mexico, Great Britain, Territories and North Pole Region. Each member nation has a veto power on all
decisions. Consensus must be reached before a decision is made.
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The GGNA House of Elected Representatives, the GGNA House of Advisers, and the GGNA Federation together form the GGNA Parliament.
GGNA Parliament decides who will represent the GGNA Federation at the Global Governments Federation. GGNA elected representatives serve at both levels of government:
GGNA House of Elected Representatives, and Global Parliament House of Elected Representatives.
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The House of Elected Representatives shall be elected by direct universal suffrage of all the Member Nations citizens in free and
secret ballot for a term of five years. Representation shall be of one Elected
Representative per million people.
GGNA Global Parliament shall, jointly with the GGNA Executive Council, enact legislation, and exercise the budgetary function,
as well as functions of political control and consultation as laid down in the Global Constitution.
GGNA Global Parliament shall elect its President and its officers from among its members.
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GGNA Global Parliament shall create, alter, abolish or consolidate the departments, commissions, offices, agencies and other parts
of the several organs of the GGNA, subject to the specific provisions of the Global Constitution.
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The GGNA is for all Citizens of the North American Community and others
by Germain Joseph Dufour
Adviser, Global Government of North America (GGNA)
July 7, 2005
Note: for most recents papers on this issue read
A) A truthful democracy for the people of the North American continent
B) The Global Community perspective on the control of the Northwest Passage, Canada sovereignty of Nunavut and 'blood resources'
C) Portal of Global Community of North America (GCNA)
As a replacement to the United Nations, we have formed Global Parliament with 9 or more Global Governments (GGs)
and an enforceable, non-military democratic Global Constitution for all. Governing bodies consist of three chambers making the Global Parliament:
1. House of Elected Representatives
2. House of Advisers, and
3. Global Governments (GGs) Federation
4. Earth Executive Council
The power of Global Parliament was de-centralized to give each GG a better chance to find the right solutions to global issues. It can act faster and be more
effective and efficient in the context of Global Community , this great, wide, wonderful world made of all these diverse global communities within
each Nation. Global Community becomes thus more fluid and dynamic. A global symbiotical relationship is created between Nations and
Global Parliament for the good of all groups participating in the relationship and for the good of humanity, all life on Earth. The relationship allows a global
equitable and peaceful development. This is the basic concept that is allowing us to group willing Member Nations from different parts of the world. A
typical example is the Global Government of North America (GGNA).
Member Nations of these global governments have not yet been selected. Through the process of a referendum in a Member Nation,
it is the people of the Member Nation who will select the Global Government they wish to belong to. During a Global Assembly
Meeting of the Earth Government, Global Parliament will accept or reject membership of a Nation in a specific Global Government.
As we have shown in the Global Constitution ,
Global Community is defined as being all
that exits or occurs at any location at any time between the Ozone layer above
and the core of the planet below. This is an important concept and particularly useful in the context of the Global Governments Federation.
A community is not about a piece of land you acquired by force or otherwise.
One could think of a typical community of a million people that does not have to be bounded by a geographical or political border. It can be a million people living in many
different locations all over the world. The Global Community is thus more fluid and dynamic. We need to let go the archaic ways of seeing a community as the street
where I live and contained by a border. Many conflicts and wars will be avoided by seeing ourselves as people with a heart, a mind and a Soul, and as part of a community
with the same. The Global Community is this great, wide, wonderful world made of all these diverse global communities.
A global symbiotical relationship between two or more
nations, or between two or more global communities, can have trade as the major aspect of the relationship or it can have as many other aspects as agreed by the
people involved. The fundamental criteria is that a relationship is created for the good of all groups participating in the relationship and for the good of humanity, all
life on Earth. The relationship allows a global equitable and peaceful development.
This is the basic concept that is allowing us to group Member Nations from different parts of the world. For example, the
Global Government of North America can be made of willing Member Nations such as Canada, the United States, Mexico, Great Britain, the Territories, and include
the North Pole region. Other nations and territories are welcome to join in.
[ Preamble ]
[ Chapter I ]
[ Chapter II ]
[ Chapter III ]
[ Chapter IV ]
[ Chapter V ]
[ Chapter VI ]
[ Chapter VII ]
[ Chapter VIII ]
[ Chapter IX ]
[ Chapter X ]
[ Chapter XI ]
[ Chapter XII ]
[ Chapter XIII ]
[ Chapter XIV ]
[ Chapter XV ]
[ Chapter XVI ]
[ Chapter XVII ]
[ Chapter XVIII ]
[ Chapter XIX ]
[ Chapter XX ]
[ Chapter XXI ]
[ Chapter XXII ]
[ Chapter XXIII ]
[ Chapter XXIV ]
[ Chapter XXV ]
[ Chapter XXVI ]
[ Chapter XXVII ]
[ Chapter XXVIII ]
[ Chapter XXIX ]
[ Preamble ]
[ Chapter I ]
[ Chapter II ]
[ Chapter III ]
[ Chapter IV ]
[ Chapter V ]
[ Chapter VI ]
[ Chapter VII ]
[ Chapter VIII ]
[ Chapter IX ]
[ Chapter X ]
[ Chapter XI ]
[ Chapter XII ]
[ Chapter XIII ]
[ Chapter XIV ]
[ Chapter XV ]
[ Chapter XVI ]
[ Chapter XVII ]
[ Chapter XVIII ]
[ Chapter XIX ]
[ Chapter XX ]
[ Chapter XXI ]
[ Chapter XXII ]
[ Chapter XXIII ]
[ Chapter XXIV ]
[ Chapter XXV ]
[ Chapter XXVI ]
[ Chapter XXVII ]
[ Chapter XXVIII ]
[ Chapter XXIX ]
Preamble [ ]
Chapter 1 What the Federation represents, its "Beliefs, Values, Principles and Aspirations"[ ]
Article 1: Establishment of the Federation.
Article 2: The Federation's values.
Article 3: The Federation's objectives.
Article 4: Fundamental freedoms and non-discrimination.
Article 5: Symbiotical relationships between the Federation and Member Nations.
Article 6: Legal personality of the Federation, Global
Community the Federation, Global Parliament .
Chapter 2 Earth Security and Peace [ ]
Chapter 2.1 Global Security and Peace
Article 1: Global Security Policies.
Article 2: Protect Life and genetic resources.
Article 3: Terrorism and global co-operation.
Article 4: The media industry and global security.
Article 5: Conflicts and wars.
Article 6: Decentralization of power.
Article 7: Responsibility of a peacemaker.
Article 8: The worst environmental degradation happens in wars.
Article 9: A trusted third party to resolve conflicts.
Article 10: The "war industry" throughout the world must be put to a complete halt and shelved forever from humanity.
Article 11: New way of doing business: you manufacture, produce, mine, farm or create a product, you become responsible and accountable of your product from beginning to end.
Article 12: Democracy, Nonviolence, and Peace.
12.1 Strengthen democratic institutions at all levels, and provide transparency and accountability in governance, inclusive participation in decision making, and access to justice.
12.2 Integrate into formal education and life-long learning the knowledge, values, and skills needed for a sustainable way of life.
12.3 Treat all living beings with respect and consideration.
12.4 Promote a culture of tolerance, nonviolence, and peace.
Chapter 2.2 The threat or use of nuclear weapons are contrary to the rules of international law.
Article 1: The threat or use of nuclear weapons are contrary to the rules of international law.
Article 2 to Article 8
Chapter 2.3 Settlement of Disputes.
Article 1 to Article 5
Chapter 2.4 Local Arrangements of Disputes.
Article 1 to Article 2
Chapter 2.5 State and global citizens participation to legal disputes
Article 1
Chapter 3 The Federation membership [ ]
Article 1: Conditions of eligibility and procedure for accession of Member Nations to the Federation.
Article 2: Suspension of the Federation membership rights.
Article 3: Voluntary withdrawal from the Federation.
Chapter 4 Global Community concepts and universal values [ ]
Chapter 4.1 The Glass Bubble concepts of "a Global Community" and "Global Community "
Article 1: The Glass Bubble concepts
Article 2: Definition of Global Community
Chapter 4.2 Universal Values
Article 1: Social Universal Values are meant to bring together the billions of people around the world for the good of all humanity
Chapter 4.3 Global Ethics
Article 2: Global ethics must always be grounded in realities.
Chapter 4.4 Global Sustainability
Chapter 4.4.1 Definition and graphical representation of global sustainability
Article 1: Definition of sustainable development.
Chapter 4.4.2 Fulfilling the requirements of global sustainability
Article 1: Essential elements of an adequate global sustainability
Article 2: Scale of Good Practices
Article 3: Implementing economic activity that can advance sustainability
Article 4: Implementing various conservation strategies
Article 5: Assessing using a combined social and economic accounting system
Article 6: Creating tests for sustainability
Article 7: Making forest management to include getting more value out of the wood
Article 8: Requiring formal impact assessment for all major projects
Chapter 4.4.3 Developing a scale of values and designing and testing quality indicators
Article 1: Developing a scale of values and designing and testing quality indicators
Chapter 4.4.4 The Global Community Overall Picture
Article 1: The Global Community Overall Picture
Article 2: Measurement of the Gross Sustainable Development Product (GSDP)
Article 3: Valuation in terms of money accounts for some non-market values
Chapter 5 The establishment of Global Communities [ ]
Article 1: Principles
Article 2: Birth right of Global Community citizens of electing representatives democratically
Article 3: Complying with the "Belief, Values, Principles and Aspirations of Global Community and the Federation"
Article 4: Formation of global communities
Article 5: Portal of Global Community
Article 6: Portal of Global Community of North America
Article 7: Portal of other global communities
Chapter 6 The Federation Global Community Citizenship [ ]
Article 1: Global Community citizenship of the Federation
Article 2: Global Community Citizenship
Article 3: Who can have a Global Community Citizenship?
Chapter 6.2 Criteria of Global Community Citizenship
Article 1: Criteria of Global Community Citizenship
Chapter 6.3 Statement of rights, responsibilities and accountabilities of Global Community citizens
Chapter 6.3.1 Statement
Article 1: Statement of Rights, Responsibilities and Accountabilities of a Person, 'a Global Community' and 'Global Community '
Article 2: The Statement includes rights, responsibilities and accountabilities
Chapter 6.3.2 Rights, responsibilities and accountabilities
Article 1: Proper governance of Earth
Article 2: The quality of Earth governance
Article 3: The most fundamental community right
Article 4: Justice is without borders
Article 5: State governments keep their status and privileges
Article 6: Vision of the Federation
Article 7: Earth governance is a balance
Article 8: The rights of states to self-determination in the global context
Article 9: The principle of non-intervention in domestic affairs
Article 10: Global co-operation
Article 11: Good Earth management
Article 12: The spiritual belief, universal values, principles and aspirations of the Federation
Article 13: Human and Earth Rights
Chapter 7 Global symbiotical relationships between the Federation and Member Nations [ ]
Article 1: The Federation and global symbiotical relationships
Article 2: Specific agreements
Article 3: Basic principles
Article 4: Emphasis of a global symbiotical relationship
Chapter 8 Enhanced cooperation between Member Nations [ ]
Article 1 to Article 8
Article 9: Global ministries
Article 10: The Global Community has already created several global ministries
Article 11: Earth needs urgently a world system of governance
Article 12: An urgent need for fundamental changes in the United Nations organization
Article 13: The most fundamental requirement of a world organization is a democratic system of voting
Article 14: Creation of Ministries is a priority
Chapter 9 The democratic base of the Federation [ ]
Article 1: Direct democracy
Article 2: The principle of democratic equality
Article 3: The principle of representative democracy
Article 4: The principle of participatory democracy
Article 5: The social partners and autonomous social dialogue
Article 6: The Global Community Ombudsperson
Article 7: Transparency of the proceedings of the Federation Institutions, Bodies and Agencies
Article 8: Protection of personal data
Article 9: Status of churches and non-confessional organisations
Article 10: Direct democracy is a community right
Chapter 10 Scale of Human and Earth Rights [ ]
Article 1: Decision-making process subjected to the Federation "Beliefs, Values, Principles and Aspirations" and to the Scale of Human and Earth Rights
Article 2: Field of application of the Federation law
Article 3: Scope and interpretation of rights and principles
Article 4: Level of protection
Article 5: Prohibition of abuse of rights
Article 6: Fundamental rights
Article 7: To change the ways of doing things, and our ways of doing business, of Global Community citizens
Chapter 10.2 Change our ways of doing things, and our ways of doing business, as per the Scale of Human and Earth Rights
Article 1: The new way of doing things and business on the planet
Article 2: The Scale is the primary guide for the decision-making process
Article 3: Scale of Human and Earth Rights
Chapter 10.3 Section 1. Ecological rights and the protection of the global life-support systems
Article 1: It is a crime against humanity and all life on Earth not to ratify the Kyoto Protocol
Article 2: Related aspects of the global life-support systems
Article 3: Fresh water and clean air are primordial human rights
Article 4: The global economy does not crush and destroy local economies
Article 5: Ecological Integrity
Article 6: Technologies which must be eliminated and prohibited because of hazards and dangers to life
Article 7: Everyone has the right to life
Article 8: Conservation of natural resources
Article 9: The rights that Global Community has in protecting the global life-support systems
Article 10: To build a sustainable global community
Article 11: Every individual, family, organization, and community has a vital role to play
Chapter 10.4 Section 2. Primordial human rights
Chapter 10.4.1 Primordial human rights
Article 1: Primordial human rights
Article 2: Primordial human rights and ecological rights are the most important rights on the Scale
Article 3: A global strategy to reinforce primordial human rights
Article 4: Security cannot be achieved through the military
Article 5: The production and trade in arms should be listed as a criminal act against humanity
Article 6: We propose a world population of 500 million people
Article 7: Policies to control our population growth
Article 8: Policies to decrease world population
Chapter 10.4.2 Respect and Care for the Community of Life
Article 1: Respect and Care for the Community of Life
Chapter 10.4.3 Human Dignity
Article 1: Human dignity
Article 2: Right to life
Article 3: Right to the integrity of the person
Article 4: Prohibition of torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
Article 5: Prohibition of slavery and forced labour
Chapter 10.4.4 Freedoms
Article 1: Right to liberty and security
Article 2: Respect for private and family life
Article 3: Protection of personal data
Article 4: Right to marry and right to found a family
Article 5: Freedom of thought, conscience and religion
Article 6: Freedom of expression and information
Article 7: Freedom of assembly and of association
Article 8: Freedom of the arts and sciences
Article 9: Right to education
Article 10: Freedom to choose an occupation and right to engage in work
Article 11: Freedom to conduct a business
Article 12: Right to property
Article 13: Right to asylum
Article 14: Protection in the event of removal, expulsion or extradition
Chapter 10.4.5 Equality
Article 1: Equality before the law
Article 2: Non-discrimination
Article 3: Cultural, religious and linguistic diversity
Article 4: Equality between men and women
Article 5: The rights of the child
Article 6: The rights of the elderly
Article 7: Integration of persons with disabilities
Chapter 10.4.6 Solidarity
Article 1: Workers' right to information and consultation within the undertaking
Article 2: Right of collective bargaining and action
Article 3: Right of access to placement services
Article 4: Protection in the event of unjustified dismissal
Article 5: Fair and just working conditions
Article 6: Prohibition of child labour and protection of young people at work
Article 7: Family and professional life
Article 8: Social security and social assistance
Article 9: Health care
Article 10: Access to services of general economic interest
Article 11: Environmental protection
Article 12: Consumer protection
Chapter 10.4.7 Universal health care, education, retirement security and employment services to every Global Community citizen
Article 1: Universal services
Chapter 10.4.8 The immediate formation of the Earth Ministry of Health
Article 1: The immediate formation of the Earth Ministry of Health
Chapter 10.4.9 Legal rights
Article 1: Everyone has the right to security of person
Article 2: No one shall be held in slavery
Article 3: No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
Article 4: No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile
Article 5: Everyone has the right to freedom of movement and residence
Article 6: Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution
Article 7: Well-being
Chapter 10.5 Section 3. The ecological rights, the protection of the global life-support systems and the primordial human rights of future generations
Article 1: All rights of Sections 1 and 2 apply to future generations
Article 2: The Federation protects rights of future generations
Chapter 10.6 Section 4. Community rights, rights of direct democracy, the right that the greatest
number of people has by virtue of its number (50% plus one) and after voting representatives democratically
Chapter 10.6.1 Rights of Global Community citizens
Article 1: Right to vote and to stand as a candidate at elections to the Global Parliament
Article 2: Right to vote and to stand as a candidate at municipal elections
Article 3: Right to good administration
Article 4: Right of access to documents
Article 5: Global Ombudsperson
Article 6: Right to petition
Article 7: Freedom of movement and of residence
Article 8: Diplomatic and consular protection
Chapter 10.6.2 Justice
Article 1: Right to an effective remedy and to a fair trial
Article 2: Presumption of innocence and right of defence
Article 3: Principles of legality and proportionality of criminal offences and penalties
Article 4: Right not to be tried or punished twice in criminal proceedings for the same criminal offence
Article 5: A sense of belonging given to Global Community
Article 6: Directive Principles for Global Community citizens
Chapter 10.6.3 Rights of direct democracy
Article 1: Rights of direct democracy
Chapter 10.7 Section 5. Economic (business and consumer rights, and
their responsibilities and accountabilities) and social rights (civil and political rights)
Chapter 10.7.1 Economic (business and consumer rights, and their responsibilities and accountabilities)
Article 1: A democratically planned global economy is needed to eradicate poverty in the world
Article 2: Corporations that they take responsibility on behalf of society
Article 3: The quality of Earth governance is reflected in each local community worldwide
Article 4: To make a business even better
Article 5: Scientists, tehnologists, technicians, engineers and all professionals to find sound solutions to human needs
Article 6: Science has a responsibility for the well-being of humanity
Article 7: Science, technology and engineering are major forces of socio-economic change
Article 8: Public funding should be directed towards very specific research projects related to the life-support system of the planet
Article 9: Science, technology and engineering to state ethical responsibilties and become a voice to present and future generations
Article 10: Prohibiting all acts, research projects, technology development, which do not conform to the ideas of humanity
Article 11: A set of rules to balance consumption, consumer rights and responsibilities
Article 12: Democracy is not to be enforced by anyone and to anyone or to any global community
Article 13: The role of families has impacts on sustainable consumption and development
Article 14: Universal quality of life values which lead to 'human betterment' or the improvement of the human condition
Article 15: Trade laws to facilitate cross border transactions
Article 16: Social justice is a universal value
Chapter 10.7.2 Social rights (civil and political rights)
Article 1: Social justice
Article 2: Socially responsible use of science and technology
Article 3: Civil and social rights and freedoms
Article 4: Democratic rights, and equality rights
Chapter 10.8 Section 6. Cultural and religious rights
Article 1: Cultural and religious differences can promote human and Earth rights
Article 2: Encouragement for cultural diversity
Article 3: Freedom for peaceful self-determination for minorities, refugees and dissenters
Article 4: Freedom to profess, practice and promote religious or religious beliefs or no religion or religious belief
Article 5: Fundamental freedoms, and language rights
Article 6: Right freely to participate in the cultural life of the community
Article 7: Freedom of thought and conscience
Article 8: A crime against the natural world is a sin
Article 9: The special responsibility that falls to all Global Community citizens
Article 10: God's sacred Earth is the moral assignment of our time
Article 11: Ecological Affirmations of Faith
Article 12: Eco-justice
Chapter 11 Limits of the Federation competences [ ]
Article 1: Fundamental principles
Article 2: Global Law and the decision-making process
Article 3: Categories of competence
Article 4: Exclusive competence of the Federation
Article 5: Areas of shared competence
Article 6: Coordination of economic and employment policies
Article 7: Global security policy
Article 8: Areas of supporting, coordinating or complementary action
Article 9: Flexibility clause
Chapter 12 Exercise of the Federation competence [ ]
Chapter 12.1 Common provisions
Article 1: The legal acts of the Federation
Article 2: Legislative acts
Article 3 : Non-legislative acts
Article 4: Implementing acts
Article 5: Principles common to the Federation's legal acts
Article 6: Publication and entry into force
Chapter 12.2 Specific provisions for implementing common global security policy
Article 1: Specific provisions for implementing common global security policy
Article 2: Specific provisions for implementing the global security and defence policy
Article 3: Specific provisions for implementing the area of freedom, security and justice
Article 4: Solidarity clause
Chapter 13 The Federation finances [ ]
Article 1: Budgetary and financial principles
Article 2: The Federation's resources
Article 3: The multiannual financial framework
Article 4: The Federation's budget
Article 5: Green Tax Shift Policy Approach
Article 6: A specific type of tobin tax
Article 7: Providing debt-free technical assistance to non-industrial and developing countries
Article 8: Good global governance
Article 9: A tobin tax as a powerful instrument of the promotion of sustainable development
Article 10: The debt of developing countries was really a global tax developed countries had to pay to developing countries
Chapter 14 The Federation with its governing institutions and bodies[ ]
Article 1: The Federation's Institutions and Bodies
Article 2: Structure of the Federation
Chapter 14.1 A) Global Parliament
Article 1: The Global Parliament
Article 2: Composition of Global Parliament
Article 3: Global Law: legislation
Chapter 14.1 A.1 The House of Elected Representatives
Article 1: Composition
Article 2: Election
Article 3: One delegate per million people on the planet
Chapter 14.1 A.2 The House of Advisers
Article 1: The Court of Auditors
Chapter 14.1 A.3 The Global Governments Federation
Article 1: The Global Governments Federation
Article 2: The Global Governments Federation Chair
Article 3: The Global Government of North America
Chapter 14.2 B) The Organs of the Federation
Chapter 14.2 B.1 Earth Executive Council
Article 1: The Earth Executive Council
Article 2: Formations of the Earth Executive Council
Chapter 14.2 B.2 the Federation Departments
Article 1: Departments of the Global Administration
Chapter 14.2 B.3 Global Civil Service Administration and Planning
Article 1: The Global Civil Service Administration and Planning (GCSAP)
Chapter 14.2 B.4 The Global Judiciary
Article 1: The Global Judiciary
Article 2:
Chapter 14.2 B.5 Agency of Global Police
Article 1: The Global Police
Chapter 14.2 B.6 Global Community Ombudspersons Office
Article 1: Composition of Global Community Ombudspersons Office
Chapter 14.2 B.7 Global Investment Bank
Article 1: Global Investment Bank
Chapter 14.2 B.8 The Court of Auditors
Article 1: The Court of Auditors
Chapter 14.2 B.9 Global Community Citizenship Office
Article 1: Global Community Citizenship Office
Chapter 14.2 B.10 Human and Earth Rights Office
Article 1: Human and Earth Rights Office
Chapter 14.2 B.11 Global Community Assessment Centre (GCAC)
Article 1: Global Community Assessment Centre
Chapter 14.2 B.12 Earth Security
Article 1: Earth Security
Chapter 14.2 B.13 Global Civil Society Council
Article 1: Global Civil Society Council
Chapter 14.2 B.14 Agency for Research, Planning and Development
Article 1: Agency for Research, Planning and Development
Chapter 14.3 Functions of the Federation
Article 1: Functions of the Federation
Chapter 14.3 A.1 The House of Elected Representatives
Chapter 14.3.1 A.1 The House of Elected Representatives
Article 1 to Article 8
Chapter 14.3.2 A.1 Voting
Article 1 to Article 19
Chapter 14.3 A.2 The House of Advisers
Chapter 14.3.1 A.2 The Federation's Advisory Bodies
Article 1: The House of Advisers
Chapter 14.3.2 A.2 The Committee of the Regions
Article 1 to Article 3
Chapter 14.3.3 A.2 The Economic and Social Committee
Article 1: The Economic and Social Committee
Article 2 to Article 4
Chapter 14.3.4 A.2 Provisions common to the Federation institutions, bodies and agencies
Article 1: Provisions common to the Federation institutions, bodies and agencies
Article 2 to Article 7
Chapter 14.3.5 A.2 Acts of the Earth Executive Council
Article 1:
Chapter 14.3.6 A.2 Global Governments Federation Advisory Board
Article 1: Global Governments Federation Advisory Board
Chapter 14.3 A.3 The Global Governments Federation
Chapter 14.3.1 A.3 The Global Governments Federation
Article 1: The Global Governments Federation
Chapter 14.3.2 A.3 Procedures of Global Parliament
Article 1: Procedures of Global Parliament
Chapter 14.3 B.1 Earth Executive Council
Chapter 14.3.1 B.1 Functions and Powers of the Earth Executive Council
Article 1: The Earth Executive Council
Chapter 14.3.2 B.1 Composition of the Earth Executive Council
Article 1: Composition of the Earth Executive Council
Chapter 14.3.3 B.1 The Global Council
Article 1: The Global Council
Chapter 14.3.4 B.1 The Cabinet Ministers
Article 1: The Cabinet Ministers
Chapter 14.3.5 B.1 Procedures of the Earth Executive Council
Article 1: Procedures of the Earth Executive Council
Chapter 14.3.6 B.1 Limitations on the Earth Executive Council
Article 1: Limitations on the Earth Executive Council
Chapter 14.3 B.2 The Federation Departments
Chapter 14.3.1 B.2 Functions of the Federation Departments
Article 1: Functions of the Federation Departments
Chapter 14.3.2 B.2 Structure and Procedures of Earth Government Departments
Article 1: Structure and Procedures of Earth Government Departments
Chapter 14.3 B.3 Global Civil Service Administration and Planning
Chapter 14.3.1 B.3 The Global Civil Service Staff
Article 1: The Global Civil Service Staff
Chapter 14.3.2 B.3 The Agency on Governmental Procedures and Global Problems
Article 1: The Agency on Governmental Procedures and Global Problems
Chapter 14.3.3 B.3 The Global Financial Administration
Article 1: The Global Financial Administration
Chapter 14.3.4 B.3 Commission for Legislative Review
Article 1: Commission for Legislative Review
Chapter 14.3 B.4 The Global Judiciary
Chapter 14.3.1 B.4 The Global Judiciary
Article 1: The Global Judiciary
Chapter 14.3.2 B.4 Forming a new nation
Article 1: Forming a new nation
Chapter 14.3.3 B.4 Application of Global Law
Article 1: Application of Global Law
Chapter 14.3.4 B.4 Legislative acts
Article 1: Legislative acts
Chapter 14.3.5 B.4 Composition of the Council of Global Judges
Article 1: Composition of the Council of Global Judges
Article 2: Responsibilities of the Global Judiciary
Article 3: The President of the Global Judiciary
Article 4: The Federation Minister of Global Affairs
Article 5: The Earth Court of Justice
Chapter 14.3.6 B.4 Earth Court of Justice
Article 1: Earth Court of Justice
Article 2: Jurisdiction of the Earth Court of Justice
Article 3: Benches of the Earth Court of Justice
Article 4: Seats of the Earth Court of Justice
Chapter 14.3.7 B.4 Council of Global Judges
Article 1: The Council of Global Judges
Chapter 14.3.8 B.4 The Superior Tribunal of the Earth Court of Justice
Article 1: The Superior Tribunal of the Earth Court of Justice
Chapter 14.3.9 B.4 The Statute of the Earth Court of Justice
Article 1: The Statute of the Earth Court of Justice
Article 2 to Article 33
Chapter 14.3 B.5 Agency of Global Police
Chapter 14.3.1 B.5 Agency of Global Police
Article 1: The enforcement of global law and global legislation
Chapter 14.3.2 B.5 Global Community Justice Network
Article 1: The Global Community Justice Network
Chapter 14.3.3 B.5 The Means of Enforcement of Global Law
Article 1: Means of Enforcement of Global Law
Article 2:
Chapter 14.3 B.6 Global Community Ombudspersons
Article 1: The Global Community Ombudspersons Office
Chapter 14.3 B.7 The Global Investment Bank
Article 1 to Article 2
Chapter 14.3 B.8 The Court of Auditors
Article 1: The Court of Auditors
Article 2 to Article 3
Chapter 14.3 B.9 Global Community Citizenship Office
Article 1:
Chapter 14.3 B.10 Human and Earth Rights Office
Article 1:
Chapter 14.3 B.11 Global Community Assessment Centre (GCAC)
Article 1: The Global Community Assessment Centre (GCAC)
Article 2: Staff of the Global Community Assessment Centre (GCAC)
Article 3: GCAC has several objectives
Chapter 14.3 B.12 Earth Security
Article 1:
Chapter 14.3 B.13 Global Civil Society Council
Chapter 14.3.1 B.13 Objectives of the Global Civil Society Council
Article 1: Objectives
Article 2:
Chapter 14.3 B.14 Agency for Research, Planning and Development
Article 1: The Agency for Research, Planning and Development
Chapter 14.4 Global Electoral and Administration Regions
Article 1: A) Global Electoral and Administrative Regions
B) Global Boundaries and Elections Administration
Chapter 14.5 Provisions concerning governing institutions and bodies
Chapter 14.5.1 Qualified majority
Article 1: Qualified majority
Chapter 14.5.2 Global Investment Bank
Article 2: The Global Investment Bank
Chapter 14.5.3 The Global Parliament
Article 3: The Global Parliament
Article 2 to Article 12
Chapter 14.5.4 The Global Governments Federation
Article 1: The Global Governments Federation
Chapter 14.5.5 The Earth Executive Council
Article 1: The Earth Executive Council
Article 2:
Article 3: Responsibilities incumbent upon the Global Judiciary
Article 4 to Article 6
Chapter 14.5.6 The Global Judiciary
Article 1: The Global Judiciary
Article 4 to Article 6
Chapter 14.5.7 The Earth Court of Justice
Article 1: The Earth Court of Justice
Chapter 14.6 The Federation's financial provisions
Chapter 14.6.1 The multinational financial frameworks
Article 1: The multinational financial framework
Chapter 14.6.2 The Federation's Annual Budget
Article 1: The Federation's Annual Budget
Article 2 to Article 4
Chapter 14.6.3 Implementation of the Annual Budget
Article 1: Implementation of the Annual Budget
Article 2 to Article 3
Chapter 14.6.4 Common provisions and procedures
Article 1: Common provisions and procedures
Article 2 to Article 5
Chapter 14.7 The Federation measures against fraud
Article 1 to Article 3
Chapter 14.8 The Trusteeship Council and Trusteeship System
Article 1 to Article 14
Chapter 15 Consistency between the different policies and activities of the Federation [ ]
Chapter 15.1 Equality between men and women
Article 1 to Article 5
Chapter 15.2 Non-discrimination and Global Community citizenship
Article 1: Global law or framework laws
Article 2 to Article 7
Chapter 16 A global market without borders in which the free movement of goods, persons, services and capital is ensured
in accordance with this Constitution [ ]
Chapter 16.1 Establishment of an effective global market
Article 1 to Article 4
Chapter 16.2 Free movement of persons and services
a. Workers
Article 1 to Article 4
b. Freedom of establishment of nationals of a Member Nation
Article 5 to Article 18
Chapter 16.3 Free movement of goods
a. The Federation Customs
Article 1 to Article 9
Chapter 16.4 Movement of capital and payments between Member Nations
Article 1 to Article 5
Chapter 16.5 Rules on competition
a. Rules applying to undertakings
Article 1 to Article 9
Chapter 16.6 Global fiscal provisions
Article 1 to Article 5
Chapter 16.7 Approximation of legislation for global market
Article 1 to Article 5
Chapter 17 Economic and monetary policy of the Federation [ ]
Article 1
Chapter 17.1 Economic policy
Article 1 to Article 7
Chapter 17.2 Global monetary policy
Article 1 to Article 7
Chapter 17.3 The Global Economic and Financial Committee
Article 1 to Article 4
a. – Provisions concerning the 'global equivalent money'
Article 5 to Article 7
Chapter 17.4 Provisions concerning Member Nations in transition
Article 1 to Article 6
Chapter 18 Global policies in other areas of the Federation [ ]
Chapter 18.1 Employment sector
Article 1 to Article 6
Article 7: Strategies concerning employment of public leaders
Chapter 18.2 Global societal sustainability policy
Article 1 to Article 10
a. The Global Social Fund
Article 11 to Article 13
Article 14: Social democracy and 'natural ownership'
Chapter 18.3 Global economic, social and territorial cooperation
Article 1 to Article 5
Chapter 18.4 Global policies and strategies on agriculture and fishery
Article 1 to Article 8
Chapter 18.5 Global environmental protection
Article 1 to Article 3
Chapter 18.6 Consumer protection
Article 1
Chapter 18.7 Global transportation sector policy
Article 1 to Article 11
Chapter 18.8 Trans-global networks in transportation
Article 1 to Article 2
Chapter 18.9 The Federation policies concerning scientific research and technological
development, and space exploration
Article 1 to Article 11
Chapter 18.10 The Federation policies concerning the energy sector
Article 1
Chapter 18.11 The Federation policies concerning the forest industry sector
Article 1: Protect photosynthesis: less CO2 , more Oxygen and better health for all of us
Article 2: Action concerning forests
Article 3: Our supply of oxygen at risk
Article 4: Response options aimed at storing excess carbon in terrestrial or ocean systems
Chapter 18.12 The Federation policies concerning the mining industry sector
Article 1: The ecological accounting and balance sheet for mining
Article 2: Mines have transformed landscapes and the lives of local people who live near mineral deposits
Article 3: Mineral exporting-countries become heavily indebted to international lenders
Article 4: The final hand-out of public money occurs when mines have to close
Article 5: There is more gold in boxes than in underground mines
Chapter 18.13 The Federation policies concerning the pharmaceutical industry sector
Article 1:
Chapter 18.14 The Federation policies concerning the oil and gas industry sector
Article 1: Strong evidence that concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere are related to global temperatures
Article 2: Carbon Dioxide is, by far, the largest contributor to Canada's GHG emissions
Article 3: Use of fossil fuels in transportation, industry, heating and power generation
Article 4: Per capita, the US will still be by far the largest polluter on the planet
Article 5: To become legally and morally responsible and accountable for their products from beginning to end
Article 6: The new way of doing business would make the US responsible and accountable of the CO2 pollution
Article 7: We could calculate the effect of the invasion of Iraq by Americans
Article 8: We could also calculate the amount of CO2 emissions due to gasoline alone and the heat produced during the emissions
Article 9: We could also calculate the total estimated resources of oil, coal, and natural gas will run out in less than a hundred years
Article 10: Global warming findings predict that increased amounts of CO2 tend to
increase the greenhouse effect and thus cause a man-made global warming
Article 11: Various scenarios of future emissions due to human activities predict that increased atmospheric
concentrations equivalent to a doubling of CO2 by 2100 is unavoidable
Article 12: There are other trace greenhouse gases that are causing the greenhouse effect
Article 13: Montreal Protocol
Article 14: missing carbon mystery
Article 15: Photosynthesis
Article 16: Virtually all life on earth, directly or indirectly, depends on photosynthesis as a source of food,
energy, and Oxygen
Article 17: Important findings obtained from research done so far
There are important findings obtained from research done so far
Article 18: Two fundamental types of response to the risks of climate change
There are two fundamental types of response to the risks of climate change
Article 19: The Global Community has created a global ministry to help humanity be prepared to fight the
harmful consequences of a global warming
Article 20: It is a priority for businesses to apply for one ECO, your Certified Corporate Global Community
Citizenship (CCGCC)
Chapter 18.15 The Federation policies concerning the production and manufacturing of plastic products
Article 1: Plastic, an all-around product the cause of wars and of a global environmental and social nightmare
Article 2: People are concerned about the future because the basic raw materials for plastic are petroleum and/or natural gas
Article 3: What is in plastics that we are not told about?
Article 4: Collecting plastic packaging at curbside fosters the belief that, like aluminum and glass, the
recovered material is converted into new packaging
Article 5: What to do? Just say no to plastics
Article 6: Plastics made from plants
Article 7: Conclusion
Article 8: Seven common misconceptions about plastics and alternatives
Chapter 19 Freedom, security and justice without borders [ ]
Chapter 19.1 General provisions
Article 1 to Article 8
Chapter 19.2 Border checks, asylum and immigration
Article 1 to Article 4
Chapter 19.3 Judicial cooperation between Member Nations and the Federation in civil matters
Article 1
Chapter 19.4 Judicial cooperation in criminal matters between Member Nations and the Federation
Article 1 to Article 5
Chapter 19.5 Cooperation between Member Nations and the Federation concerning global policing
Article 1 to Article 3
Chapter 19.5.1 Miscellaneous Provisions
Article 1: Transitional Security Arrangements
Article 2 to Article 4
Chapter 20 Areas where the Federation may take coordinating, complementary or supporting action [ ]
Chapter 20.1 Public health
Article 1:
Chapter 20.2 Industry sector
Article 1:
Chapter 20.3 Culture
Article 1:
Chapter 20.4 Education, vocational training, youth and sport
Article 1 to Article 2
Chapter 20.5 Civil protection, emergencies and rescues
Article 1:
Article 2: Connecting with Nature for our species survival
Chapter 20.6 Global Administration
Article 1
Chapter 20.7 Celebration of Life Day
Article 1:
Chapter 20.8 Earth flag
Article 1:
Chapter 20.9 The ECO Award
Article 1: Criteria to obtain the ECO Award
Article 2: Categories of the ECO Awards
Article 3: ECO Award in the business category
Chapter 20.10 Portal of Global Community
Article 1: Portal of the Global Communit
Chapter 20.11 Global Dialogue
Article 1: One of the most important factors in our lives is the inter-connection we have to others
Chapter 20.12 Restoration of the planet, our home
Article 1: Global Community Assessment Centre ( GCAC )
Chapter 20.13 Management of Earth resources
Article 1: The importance of good environmental governance
Article 2: Environmental governance
Article 3: Better environmental governance is one of the most direct routes to fairer and more sustainable
use of natural resources
Article 4: Consumerism
Article 5: Food consumption
Article 6: Global wood consumption
Chapter 20.14 Education and training for global citizens
Article 1: Basic education for all Global Community citizens
Chapter 20.15 Employment for global citizens
Article 1:
Chapter 20.16 Cities: power, rights, responsibilities and accountabilities
Article 1: Cities: power, rights, responsibilities and accountabilities
Article 2: Recommendations
Article 3: Measuring indicators and indices
Article 4: Recommendations to alleviate the effects of climate change in the world
Article 5: Government leadership
Chapter 20.17 Agriculture and needs of Global Community
Article 1: World population
Article 2: Genetic engineering
Article 3: Food Consumption
Article 4: Food Production
Article 5: Sustainable food security at the individual, household, national, regional and global levels is a primordial huam right
Article 6: Action Plan of the Global Community
Chapter 20.18 Preventive actions against polluters
Article 1: A crime against humanity and all life on Earth not to ratify the Kyoto Protocol
Article 2: The military should be asked to do today is to protect the global life-support systems
Article 3: The production and trade in arms now listed as a criminal act against humanity
Article 4: The Earth Court of Justice has listed America as the first nation to be prosecuted for a global environmental crime
Article 5: The Earth Court of Justice will hear cases involving many different types of crimes
Chapter 20.19 The cattle and beef industry
Article 1: The cattle and beef industry
Chapter 20.20 Earth environmental governance
Article 1: Earth environmental governance
Chapter 20.21 Alternative energy
Article 1: World energy demand can be largely fulfilled by renewable energy technologies
Chapter 20.22 Global response to events: emergencies, rescues and aid
Article 1: Global response to events: emergencies, rescues and aid
Chapter 20.23 Forest industry and paper manufacturing
Article 1:
Chapter 20.24 Establisment of global symbiotical relationships
Article 1:
Chapter 20.25 Global Exhibition
Article 1: The establishment of the concept of the Global Exhibition
Article 2: The goal of the Global Exhibition
Article 3: The contents of the Global Exhibition
Article 4: Social, educational, artistic, political, religious and economic aspects of the Global Exhibition
Article 5: The issues of the Global Exhibition
Article 6: The art world and the Global Exhibition
Chapter 20.26 Manufacturing sector
Article 1:
Chapter 20.27 Energy industry
Article 1:
Chapter 20.28 War industry
Article 1:
Chapter 20.29 Communications
Article 1:
Chapter 20.30 Transportation sector
Article 1:
Chapter 20.31 Media industry and education
Article 1: GLOBALIZATION, MEDIA AND MERGERS: the Impact on Youth and Education
Chapter 20.32 Conservation strategies for natural ecosystems
Article 1: Economic valuation as a framework incentive to enforce profit-based conservation strategies for natural ecosystems.
Chapter 21 Special relationships between groups of Member Nations and Territories and statement regarding non-self-governing Territories [ ]
Article 1 to Article 11
Chapter 22 The Federation's action on the international scene [ ]
Chapter 22.1 General provisions
Article 1 to Article 2
Chapter 22.2 Global security and defense policy
Chapter 22.2.1 Common security policy
Article 1: Common security policy
Article 2 to Article 15
Chapter 22.2.2 Global security and defense policy
Article 1 to Article 5
Chapter 22.2.3 Financial provisions
Article 1
Chapter 22.3 Global commercial policy
Article 1 to Article 2
Chapter 22.4 Global cooperation with Third Countries and humanitarian aid
Chapter 22.4.1 Development cooperation
Article 1 to Article 3
Chapter 22.4.2 Financial and technical cooperation with Third Counstries
Article 1 to Article 2
Chapter 22.4.3 Humanitarian aids
Article 1
Chapter 22.5 Restrictive measures
Article 1
Chapter 22.6 International Agreements
Article 1 to Article 4
Chapter 22.7 The Federation relations and delegations with International Organizations and Third Countries
Article 1 to Article 2
Chapter 22.8 Implementation of the global solidarity clause
Article 1
Chapter 23 Safeguards and Reservations [ ]
Chapter 23.1 Safeguards and Reservations
Chapter 23.1 Safeguards and Reservations
Article 1: Certain Safeguards
Article 2: Reservation of Powers
Chapter 23.2 Global Federal Zones and the Global Capitals of the six Continental Divisions of Earth
Article 1: Global Federal Zones
Article 2: The Global Capitals
Chapter 23.3 Global Territories and Global Symbiotical Relationships
Chapter 23.3.1 Global Territories
Article 1: Global Territory
Chapter 23.3.2 Global Symbiotical Relationships
Article 1: Global Symbiotical Relationships
Chapter 23.4 Ratification and implementation of the Global Constitution
Chapter 23.4.1 Ratification of the Global Constitutions
Article 1: Ratification of the Global Constitution
Chapter 23.4.2 Stages of Implementation
Article 1: Stages of Implementation
Chapter 23.4.3 First Operative Stage of the Federation
Article 1: First Operative Stage of the Federation
Chapter 23.4.4 Second Operative Stage of the Federation
Article 1: Second Operative Stage of the Federation
Chapter 23.4.5 Full Operative Stage of the Federation
Article 1: Full Operative Stage of the Federation
Chapter 23.4.6 Costs of Ratification
Article 1: Costs of Ratification
Chapter 23.5 Amendments of the Global Constitution
Article 1: Amendments of the Global Constitution
Chapter 23.6 Provisional Federation
Chapter 23.6.1 Provisional Federation
Article 1: Actions to be taken by the Global Constituent Assembly
Chapter 23.6.2 Work of the Preparatory Commissions
Article 1: Work of the Preparatory Commissions
Chapter 23.6.3 Composition of the Provisional Global Parliament
Article 1: Composition of the Provisional Global Parliament
Chapter 23.6.4 Formation of the Provisional Earth Executive Council
Article 1: Formation of the Provisional Earth Executive Council
Chapter 23.6.5 First Actions of the Provisional Federation
Article 1: First Actions of the Provisional Federation
Chapter 24 Global provisions [ ]
Chapter 24.1 Global provisions
Article 1 to Article 13
Chapter 24.2 General and final provisions
Article 1:
Article 2:
Article 3: Legal continuity in relation to Global Community and the Federation
Article 4: Scope
Article 5: Procedure for revising the Treaty establishing this
Constitution
Article 6: Adoption, ratification and entry into force of the
Treaty establishing the Constitution
Article 7: Duration of the Treaty
Article 8: Languages of the Treaty
Chapter 25 Protocols [ ]
Chapter 25.1 Protocol of national Parliaments in the Federation
Article 1: Protocol of national Parliaments in Earth
Government
Article 2: Information for Member Nations' national
Parliaments
Chapter 25.2 Protocol on the application of the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality
Article 1:
Chapter 25.3 Protocol on the representation of Global Community citizens in Global Parliament
Article 1: Provisions concerning the Global Parliament
Article 2: Provisions concerning the weighting of votes in the
Global Governments Federation and the Earth Executive Council
Article 3: Protocol of the 'global equivalent money'
Article 4 to Article 5
Chapter 25.4 Other Protocols
Article 1: Other Protocols
Chapter 26 The Federation Departments [ ]
Article 1: The Federation Departments, Ministries: introduction
Article 2: Earth Ministry of Health
Article 3: Global ministries for Earth management
Article 4: The formation of global ministries
Chapter 27 Founding Members of Global Community and the Federation [ ]
Article 1: Founding Members of Global Community and the Federation
Article 2: Legal personality of the Federation, Global
Community
Chapter XXVIII Global Constitution Advisory Board [ ]
Article 1: Members of the Advisory Board for the development of the Global Constitution
Chapter XXIX Protocol of National Parliaments in Global Parliament[ ]
Article 1: Protocol of National Parliaments in Global Parliament
Preamble
The peoples of all Nations, in creating an ever closer Federation of Global Governments (the Federation) among
them, are resolved to share a peaceful future based on common values. Conscious
of its spiritual and moral heritage, the Federation is founded on
the indivisible, universal values of human dignity, freedom, equality and
solidarity; it is based on the principles of democracy and the rule of law.
It places the individual at the heart of its activities, by establishing
the Global Community citizenship of the Federation and by creating
an era of freedom, security and justice.
The Federation contributes
to the preservation and to the development of these common values while
respecting the diversity of the cultures and traditions of the peoples of
all Nations as well as the national identities of Member Nations and the
organisation of their public authorities at national, regional and local
levels; it seeks to promote balanced and sustainable development and ensures
free movement of persons, goods, services and capital, and the freedom of
establishment. To this end, it is necessary to strengthen the protection
of fundamental rights in the light of changes in society, social progress
and scientific and technological developments by making those rights more
visible in this Constitution.
The Federation's Constitution reaffirms, with due regard for the powers
and tasks of the Federation and the principle of subsidiarity, the
rights as they result, in particular, from the constitutional traditions
and international obligations common to Member Nations, the Scale of Social Values, or Scale of Global Rights,
adopted by the Federation and by the Global Council of all Nations
and the case law of the Earth Court of Justice of the Federation and of the
Global Court of Global Rights. Enjoyment of these rights entails responsibilities
and duties with regard to other persons, to the human community and to future
generations. The Federation therefore recognises the rights, freedoms
and principles set out hereafter.
We the Peoples of Global Community are reaffirming faith in the fundamental human rights, in the dignity and
worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and smalll. We the Peoples
implies every individual on Earth. Earth management and good governance is now a priority and a duty of every responsible person on Earth. The
Global Community has taken action by calling the Divine Will into our lives and following its guidance.
Divine Will is now a part of the Soul of Humanity to be used for the higher purpose of good and Life's evolution.
We will learn to serve humanity and radiate the Will of God to others. We will establish conditions under which justice and
respect for the obligations arising from treaties and other sources of international law can be maintained, and we promote
social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom.
The spiritual belief, universal values, principles and aspirations of Global Community will be attained by:
* practicing tolerance and living together in peace and harmony with one another as neighbours,
* promoting the economic and social advancement of all peoples,
* maintaining peace and security in the world by using negotiations and peaceful means,
* finding unity in diversity with all Life,
* establishing the respect for the life-support system of the planet,
* keeping Earth healthy, productive and hospitable for all people and living things, and
* applying the principle that when there is a need to find a solution to a problem or a concern, a sound solution would be to choose a measure or conduct an action, if possible,
which causes reversible damage as opposed to a measure or an action causing an irreversible loss.
The Federation primary goal and focus are including only a few aspects of the original work done that produced the Global Constitution. The Federation's Constitution itself
gives the highest priority to the following aspects:
* essential services
* the Judiciary
* the Global Protection Agency (GPA)
* Global Ministries
to manage the needs of the Peoples of Member States.
These four aspects are a part of the Global Movement to Help of Global Community . From now on we serve the people of all nations, all life on Earth.
Each Global Government is made more responsible and accountable to the people of member nations within the region where it operates.
Essential services to the people of each member nation are now the most important global rights on the Scale of Global Rights and are protected by the
Global Protection Agency (GPA) of each member nation.
This Movement is described here. First the meaning of Global Community expression was defined back in 1985. All Global Citizens are a part of
this Global Community and have accepted the Criteria of the Global Citizenship.
We are all volunteer soldiers
of Global Community Peace Movement.
This Global Movement to Help offers Essential Services to serve the people of all nations, all life on Earth.
As a first step to getting help, all nations can and should approve the first three sections on the Scale of Global Rights.
The approval would supersede the political and physical borders of participating member nations. The approval would mean politics and justice without borders only
concerning those three sections, i.e essential services.
The Global Protection Agency (GPA) would have the approval from all member nations to give immediate help, bypassing normal government protocols.
Somewhat like an emergency unit but at the global level. That is what those first three sections on the Scale of Global Rights
mean. They represent an efficient and immediate emergency response to help.
First, participating member nations need to give their approval to the GPA.
The GPA is a global organization much like the World Trade Organization (WTO) for trade between nations, the World Health Organization (WHO) for health,
or the European Union, North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), South American Community of Nations (SACON) for trade and economics.
The GPA offers an efficient emergency response to help.
The GPA is a short term solution, an immediate and efficient response to help. There are also long term solutions. As with the short term solution, the most significant long term solution is also related to
the Scale of Global Rights. The Scale was entrenched is Federation's Constitution and is thus the fundamental guide to Global Law.
Now the Scale of Global Rights is a long term solution and is also a part of the Global Movement to Help of Global Community .
The Scale was designed to help all life on Earth. What would be preferable is that nations unite amongst themselves to help.
Over time, we have seen the creation of the United Nations, the European
Union, the South American Community of Nations, and the North American Free Trade Agreement. Except for the UN, these organizations are mainly concerned with trade and economics.
The Global Community offers a more meaningful union in the form of nine or more Global Governments. For instance the South American Community of Nations can be
a Global Government by simply accepting the Federation's Constitution as a way of dealing between member nations. A Global Government is concerned not only with economics and trade,
but also with the environment, health, agriculture, education, energy, food, social, cultural and many other essential aspects.
The Federation of Global Governments is the place of meeting between Global Governments.
The very first step of the Federation, and maybe the only one for several decades ahead of us, would be the approval of essential services amongst the participating member nations. The Global
Community has researched and developed such services and listed them here. All of them are already in operation on a small scale.
We want each Global Government to take a larger share of responsibility of the specific region where it operates, and be more accountable to the people of that region.
And we want a Global Government to be made of wealthy nations as well as nations in need of help. Be compassionate. Each Global Government is obliged to
offer Essential Services to the people of its member nations.
The Federation of Global Governments is now applying more emphasis on the urgent need from the people of all nations to give everyone essential services.
The urgent need to give all Global Citizens essential services was made obvious in the past few years after the occurrence of natural disasters, and by
global destruction and disasters created by governments and the military.
The Global Community has already declared a planetary state of emergency to that effect.
Today, earquakes, cyclones and other natural disasters, as well as human made global destruction and disasters, require a rapid and efficient response from the world to help those in needs. We need to be organized and ready to help.
We need all nations to be a part of this Global Movement to Help.
In the chaos after the magnitude 7.9 earthquake in China, which made 5 million homeless, many survivors were separated from their families.
Burma was hit by a cyclone at the beginning of the month of May, leaving over two million persons in need of emergency relief.
Thousands of children and parents have been separated. Nowadays, natural and human made disasters have become more frequent and require a rapid response to help.
The Global Community offers both a short term solution and a long term solution to the people of all nations.
Both solutions have been integrated into the Scale of Global Rights ,
itself a necessary first step which must be approved by all of us.
- Federation of Global Governments Head Quarters (HQ)
- Essential services
- Global Justice Network
- Global Protection Agency (GPA)
- Global Rights
- Portal of Global Community
- Portal Global Dialogue 2009
- Global Information Media (GIM) proclamations
- Portal of Global Dialogue 2008
- Proceedings of the Global Dialogue
- Global Peace Movement amongst nations and people
- Global Citizens voting on issues
What we offer to the people of all nations is to guarantee rights of Sections 1, 2, and 3 on the Scale of Global Rights.
We serve all people of Global Community , the people of all nations, all life on Earth, much like an emergency unit would do on a global level.
Concerning Sections 1, 2, and 3, it shall be Global Community highest priority to guarantee these rights to their respective Member Nations and to have proper legislation and
implement and enforce global law as it applies and as shown in the Federation's Constitution.
Section 1. Global [ Ecological, environmental, protection of life-support systems ] rights
Section 2. Primordial human rights
- safety and security
-
have shelter
-
'clean' energy
-
a 'clean' and healthy environment
-
drink fresh water
-
breath clean air
-
eat a balance diet
-
basic clothing
-
universal health care and education, and
-
employment for all
Section 3. The Global [ Ecological, environmental, protection of life-support systems ] rights, and the primordial human rights of future generations
Those are our essential services.
The GPA is a global organization much like the World Trade Organization (WTO) for trade between nations, the World Health Organization (WHO) for health,
or the European Union, North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), South American Community of Nations (SACON) for trade and economics.
The GPA offers an efficient emergency response to help.
The GPA is a short term solution, an immediate and efficient response to help. There are also long term solutions. As with the short term solution, the most significant long term solution is also related to
the Scale of Global Rights. The Scale was entrenched in the Global Constitution and is thus a fundamental guide to Global Law.
The work of Global Community , the global civil society, and the determination of government worldwide, make it possible for everyone to comply with Global Law. Building global communities requires a mean to enforce Global Law
for the protection of life on Earth.
Global Civilization guides humanity for the building of global communities. This is a great opportunity for globallateralism. Global Law includes legislation covering all essential aspects of human activities.
The Global Protection Agency (GPA) will train and lead a global force, bypassing traditional peacekeeping and military bodies such as the United Nations and NATO. The GPA will enforce the law. And that is a long term solution
to the planetary state of emergency
we offer Global Community . And that is also how we can stop the global warming of the planet and protect the global life-support systems, thus largely improving the quality of life of the next generations.
As we enact Global Law, we will begin to take on a much deeper kind of global leadership, one that earns more respect than envy and more gratitude than hatred, one that can catapult the whole planet forward into a future where war is
no longer thinkable between nation-states and a legitimate and beneficial global government is able to cope with global problems.
Global Rights year one
is a new impetus of Global Community to educate everyone about the
need for a change in thinking and of doing things amongst all nations.
We need to realize what is a priority, what is the most important, and
what is the least important for our survival. We need to make hard choices.
We need a clear vision. We need a common vision. And we must all change!
There are many important aspects of our lives we can no longer do, or should
never do anymore. They are destructive. Humanity and all life can no longer
afford activities that destroy life and the global environment. And there
are other activities we must do, certainly thousands of them, to assure
the survival of life on Earth. In view of the planetary state of emergency
we all must change, we must do things differently to give life on Earth
a better survival chance.
The Global Community Global Justice Movement along with Global Community Peace Movement
have been and continue to be the two major pillars of the Global Movement to Help.
The Global Justice Movement has many inter-related components: monetary, social, economic, environmental, democracy, and peace.
The Global Community Global Justice Movement promotes new thinking to benefit all economies and societies – the true, fair, democratic and efficient solution to poverty.
The Global Community has the productive resources to eliminate poverty and injustice. Humanity is now in the process of developing the democratic and transparent communications
infrastructure which can bring this about.
Our approach transcends left-wing/right-wing designations. We see both conventional capitalism and socialism as being two arms of a philosophy which concentrate power in an
elite, to the detriment of society as a whole. Reforming the current money system, to empower each and every person, is a first step for justice.
The Global Community Global Justice Movement stands for:
1. Each person has the right to have warmth, clean air, clean water, food and housing, along with access to a quality health and educational system.
2. Every person should be respected, equal, free and able to choose their own destiny.
3. Everyone should be able to fulfill their full emotional, intellectual and spiritual potential.
4. Every person must respect the rest of creation and take responsibility for preserving the environment including the fauna and flora, all of which are interdependent
and share a divine origin with humanity.
5. The inalienable rights of the individual include the rights of life, liberty, access to productive property, truly free markets, and equal justice before the law.
6. Global Economic System that is fair for all.
7. It is the duty of democratic government to secure the results the people want from the transparent management of their public affairs, as far as such results do not
infringe on the rights of the individual.
8. The Global Community Global Peace Movement is about educating ourselves to engage in personal diplomacy in another country. We are given
opportunities to meet and listen to some of the leading authorities on such subjects as humanitarian
and volunteerism, education, politics, historical, social and cultural perspectives, conflict management, teamwork, world affairs, community involvement, and religion.
9. Global Justice for all Life on the planet and it is about:
* establishing respect for human and Earth rights;
* implementing a global regulatory framework for capitals and corporations that emphasizes global corporate ethics, corporate social
responsibility, protection of human and Earth rights, the environment, community and family aspects, safe working
conditions, fair wages and sustainable consumption aspects;
* establishing freshwater and clean air as primordial human rights;
* practicing tolerance and living together in peace and harmony with one another as neighbours;
* promoting the economic and social advancement of all peoples;
* maintaining peace and security in the world by using negotiations and peaceful means;
* finding unity in diversity with all Life;
* establishing the respect for the life-support system of the planet;
* keeping Earth healthy, productive and hospitable for all people and living things, and
* applying the principle that when there is a need to find a solution to a problem or a concern, a sound solution would be to choose a measure or conduct an action, if possible, which causes reversible damage as
opposed to a measure or an action causing an irreversible loss.
The Global Community has shown that corporate-style globalization that ignores the needs of the poor and the environment will no longer be tolerated. The Global Community
is joining students, environmentalists, people of faith, human rights activists, and others, in the global struggle against corporate
globalization being fought in cities and towns across the world.
We works on issues of global economic and social justice and sustainability. We believe another world is possible and necessary. We envision a world free of corporate
domination and crushing debt, particularly in communities of color. We act to expose and change the institutionalized violence wrought by international financial and
trade institutions such as the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and World Trade Organization.
Cancel all impoverished country debt to the World Bank and IMF, using the institutions' own resources.
End all World Bank and IMF policies that hinder people's access to food, clean water, shelter, health care, education, and right to organize.
(Such "structural adjustment" policies include user fees, privatization, and so-called economic austerity programs).
Stop all World Bank support for socially and environmentally destructive projects such as oil, gas, and mining activities, and all support for projects such as dams that
include forced relocation of people.
We are committed to nonviolence and recognizes militarism as a tool used by the global corporate elite to keep money flowing to the privileged few while restricting the
rights of people worldwide. We oppose corporate practice which places short-term profits ahead of human dignity, sustainable development and a healthy earth. We stand for
the globalization of our rights to speech, thought, religion, assembly, a clean environment, self-determination, freedom from fear and persecution and freedom
from poverty.
We stand for the rights of women, children, elderly, affordable health care, strong labor rights and social and economic policies that put people and the environment before
profits. We are opposed to the globalization of greed and obscene concentrations of wealth -- we say that
another world is possible and necessary.
The Global Community is a non-hierarchical nonviolent organization of individuals and organizations that promotes the arts, conducts workshops, facilitates nonviolent direct actions,
educates, organizes, campaigns, empowers, and aims to rip injustice from its roots.
Realizing that:
* Global Community today has come to a turning point in history,
and that we are on the threshold of new global order leading to an era of peace, prosperity, justice and harmony;
* there is an interdependence of people, nations and all life;
* humanity's abuse of science and technology has brought Global Community
to the brink of disaster through the production of weaponry of
mass destruction and to the brink of ecological and social catastrophe;
* the traditional concept of security through military
defense is a total illusion both for the present and for future generations;
* misery and conflicts have caused an ever increasing disparity
between rich and poor;
* we, as Peoples, are conscious of our obligation to posterity to save Global Community from
imminent and total annihilation;
* Global Community is One despite the existence of diverse nations, races, creeds, ideologies and cultures,
* the principle of unity in diversity is the basis for a new age when war shall be outlawed and peace prevail;
when the earth's total resources shall be equitably used for human welfare; and when basic global rights, responsibilities and accountabilities shall
be shared by all without discrimination; and
* the greatest hope for
the survival of life on Earth is the establishment of a democratic Federation of Global
Governments.
We, citizens of Global Community , hereby resolve to establish
a federation of all nations, the Federation , to govern in accordance with this Constitution.
The purposes of the Federation for Global Community are to:
1. maintain international peace and security in conformity with the principles of justice and
global law;
2. promote friendly relations among nations, individuals and communities based on:
* respect for the principle of equal rights and self-determination of Peoples; and
* symbiotical relationships;
3. promote global co-operation to:
* find sound solutions to economic, social, cultural, humanitarian, local and global community problems;
and
* establish respect for global rights and for fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to
race, sex, language, or religion.
4. be a home and a global community centre to all nations, people and local communities and help them harmonize their
actions to achieve their common goals.
5. promote worldwide awareness of:
a) the "Beliefs, Values, Principles and Aspirations" of the Federation,
b) global symbiotical relationships amongst people, institutions,
cities, provinces and nations of the world, and between the Federation and all nations, and in the business sector,
c) global societal sustainability,
d) good Earth governance and management,
e) the Scale of Global Rights,
f) the Statement of Rights, Responsibilities and Accountabilities of a Person and of Global Community ,
g) the Criteria to obtain Global Community Citizenship,
h) consistency between the different policies and activities of the Federation,
i) a global market without borders in which the free movement of goods, persons, services and capitals is ensured in accordance with this Constitution,
j) the new ways of doing business and trade in the world,
k) the Celebration of Life Day on May 26 of each year,
l) the finding of an Earth flag,
m) the ECO Award,
n) the Portal of Global Community , and
o) the concept of a Global Dialogue.
The Federation shall reinforce humanity's new vision of the world throughout the millennium.
For the first time in human history, and the first time this millennium,
humanity has proposed a benchmark shown here more explicitly in the different Chapters of the Federation's Constitution:
* formation of global ministries in all important aspects of our lives
* getting ride of corruption at all levels of government
* the establishment of the Global Protection Agency (GPA) to fight against the growing threat to the security of all Peoples, all life on our planet, and to fight against global crimes
* the Scale of Global Rights as a replacement to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
* Statement of Rights, Responsibilities and Accountabilities of a person belonging to 'a global community' and to 'Global Community '
* an evolved global democracy based on the Scale of Global Rights and the Federation's Constitution
* a central organization for Earth management, the restoration of the planet and Earth governance: Global Community Assessment Centre (GCAC)
* the Earth Court of Justice to deal with all aspects of governance and management of the Earth
* a new impetus given to the way of doing business and trade
* more new, diversified (geographical, economical, political, social, business, religious) symbiotical relationships between nations, communities, businesses, for the good and well-being of all
* proposal to reform the United Nations, NATO, World Trade Organization, World Bank, IMF, E.U., NAFTA, FTAA, and to centralize them under the Federation,
and these organizations will be asked to pay a global tax to be administered by the Federation
* the Peace Movement of the Global Community and shelving of the war industry from humanity
* a global regulatory framework for capitals and corporations that emphasizes global corporate ethics, corporate social responsibility,
protection of global rights, the environment, community and family aspects, safe working conditions, fair wages and sustainable
consumption aspects
* the ruling by the Earth Court of Justice of the abolishment of the debt of the poor or developing nations as it is really a form of global tax to be paid
annually by the rich or industrialized nations to the developing nations
* establishing freshwater and clean air as primordial human rights
Chapter I What the Federation represents, its "Beliefs, Values, Principles and Aspirations"
The Preamble and Chapter 1 to Chapter 10 inclusive reflect the "Beliefs, Values, Principles and Aspirations" of the Federation.
Article 1: Establishment of the Federation
1. Reflecting the will of Global Community citizens and all Nations to build a common future,
this Constitution establishes the Federation, on which Member Nations confer competences to attain objectives
they have in common. The Federation shall coordinate the policies
by which Member Nations aim to achieve these objectives.
2. The Federation shall be open to all Member Nations which respect
its values and are committed to promoting them together.
3. The Federation was first thought out by the Founding Members of Global Community .
The Global Community organization was first discussed in a report on
global changes published in 1990 by Germain Dufour. The report contained 450 policies (workable sound solutions) on a global sustainable development, and was
presented to the United Nations, the Government of Canada, the provincial government of Alberta and several non-profit
organizations and scientists. Historically, the Earth Community Organization (ECO) was called the
Global Community organization. The name was changed during the August 2000 Global Dialogue. Thereafter, we used both names as
meaning the same organization. The Global Community means the Earth Community Organization and vice
versa. The idea of organizing an international conference and calling it a Global Dialogue first originated in 1990 and was
thought out by Global Community also making its first beginning. From that year on, Global Community WebNet Ltd. has operated its business under the name of Global Community and is still doing now.
The business owns copyrights on all materials produced during every Global Dialogue since 1990.
All Participants of Global Dialogue 2000, the World Congress on Managing and Measuring Sustainable Development - Global Community
Action 1 have been given a lifetime membership of Global Community organization.
This is the founding group of Global Community organization, Earth Community Organization, the Federation , the Global Dialogue concept, and the
global community concepts and universal values. Along with the new Participants to Global Dialogue 2005, this is also the founding group of this Constitution.
The list of all Founding Members was shown in Chapter XXVII.
4. Throughout this Constitution, the expressions 'the Federation ', and 'Global Community ' were
used to mean the same organization. These expressions represent the same entity and legal personality and, therefore, were used interchangeably.
Article 2: The Federation 's values
The Federation is founded
on the values of respect for human dignity, liberty, democracy, equality,
the rule of law and respect for human and Earth rights. These values are common to
Member Nations in a society of pluralism, tolerance, justice, solidarity
and non-discrimination. These values along with the " Beliefs, Values, Principles and Aspirations" of the Federation ,
are meant to give global citizens a sense of direction.
Article 3: The Federation 's objectives
1. The Federation 's aim is to:
1.1 promote peace, its values and the well-being of its Peoples;
1.2 protect the global life-support systems by:
* good governance and management
* governing keeping in mind:
a) the Scale of Global Rights;
b) the Statement of Rights, Responsibilities and Accountabilities of a person and of Global Community ;
c) the criteria to obtain Global Community citizenship; and
d) primordial human and Earth rights of Global Community citizens;
2. The Federation shall offer its Global Community citizens
freedom, security and justice without internal frontiers, and a single
market for trade where competition is free and undistorted.
3. The Federation shall work for the global sustainability of
all Nations based on balanced economic growth, a social market economy, highly
competitive and aiming at full employment and social progress, and with
a high level of protection and improvement of the quality of the environment.
It shall promote scientific and technological advance. It shall combat social
exclusion and discrimination, and shall promote social justice and protection,
equality between women and men, solidarity between generations and protection
of children's rights. It shall promote economic, social and territorial
cohesion, and solidarity among Member Nations. The Federation shall
respect its rich cultural, religious, and linguistic diversity, and shall ensure that this
global cultural and religious heritage is safeguarded and enhanced.
4. In its relations with Global Community , the Federation shall uphold
and promote its values and interests. It shall contribute to peace, security,
the sustainability of Global Community , solidarity and mutual respect
among Peoples, free and fair trade, eradication of poverty and protection
of human rights and in particular children's rights, as well as to strict
observance and development of global law of this Constitution.
5. These objectives shall be pursued by appropriate means, depending on
the extent to which the relevant competences are attributed to the Federation in this Constitution.
Article 4: Fundamental freedoms and non-discrimination
1. Free movement of persons, goods, services and capital, and freedom
of establishment shall be guaranteed within and by the Federation ,
in accordance with the provisions of this Constitution.
2. In the field of application of the Constitution, and without prejudice
to any of its specific provisions, any discrimination on grounds of nationality
shall be prohibited.
Article 5: Symbiotical relationships between the Federation and Member
Nations
1. The Federation shall respect the national identities of Member
Nations, inherent in their fundamental structures, political and constitutional,
inclusive of regional and local self-government. It shall respect their
essential Nation functions, including those for ensuring the territorial integrity
of the Nation, and for maintaining law and order and safeguarding internal
security.
2. Following the principle of loyal cooperation, the Federation
and Member Nations shall, in full mutual respect, assist each other
in carrying out tasks which flow from this Constitution. Member Nations
shall facilitate the achievement of the Federation 's tasks and refrain
from any measure which could jeopardise the attainment of the objectives
set out in this Constitution.
3. The Federation shall seek to establish symbiotical relationships with Member Nations.
Article 6: Legal personality of the Federation , and Global Community
The Federation shall have legal personality. These expressions represent
the same entity and legal personality and, therefore, were used interchangeably. They are being expressed throughout this Constitution, and by Global Community .
Chapter II Earth Security and Peace
There is a complementary section in Chapter 22.2, Global Security and Defense Policy.
Chapter 2.1 Global Security and Peace
Article 1: Global Security Policies
The Federation has broadened the traditional focus of the security of states to include both the security of people as well as that of the
planet. Global security policies include:
a) every person on Earth has a right to a secure existence, and all states have an obligation to protect those rights;
b) prevention of conflicts and wars; identification, anticipation, and resolving conflicts before they become armed confrontations;
c) military force is not a legitimate political instrument;
d) weapons of mass destruction are not legitimate instruments of national defence;
e) eliminate all weapons of mass destruction from all nations and have inspectors verifying progress to that effect;
f) all nations should sign and ratify the conventions to eliminate nuclear, chemical and biological weapons;
g) the production and trade in arms should be listed as a criminal act against humanity, all life on our planet; this global ministry, the Ministry
of Global Security and Peace, will introduce a
Convention on the curtailment of the arms trade, a provision for a mandatory Arms Register and the prohibition of the financing or
subsidy of arms exports by governments;
h) the development of military capabilities is a potential threat to the security of people and all life on Earth; the ministry
will make the demilitarization of global politics a high priority;
i) anticipating and managing crises before they escalate into armed conflicts and wars;
j) maintaining the integrity of the environment and global life-support systems; and
k) managing the environmental, economic, social, political and military conditions that threatened the security of
people and the planet.
Article 2: Protect Life and genetic resources.
In the past, security was thought as better accomplished through military means. Expanding the military capabilities and forming alliances
with other nations were the only way to 'win'. Today wars are unlikely to produce winners. The Global Community is all over the planet. Ethnic
groups are everywhere. So we would fight our own people? Wars truly
make no sense! The world is too crowded and too small nowadays! And weapons too lethal! So security cannot be achieved through the military. The
only job the military should be asked to do today is to protect the global life-support systems. These systems have the highest priority
on the Scale of Global Rights and are certainly more important than any of the other rights on the Scale including security. Simply because without life there is
no other right possible. Without Oxygen there is no life! Without clean water there is no life! So protect life on Earth at all costs.
Wars are the biggest threat to life and the ecosystem of the planet. Primordial human rights come next on the Scale of Global Rights. Without a shelter life will still exist in some places but is not possible in cold place.
There are many related aspects of the global life-support systems:
* primordial human and Earth rights;
* global warming;
* Ozone layer;
* wastes of all kind including nuclear and release of radiation;
* climate change;
* species of the fauna and flora becoming extinct;
* losses of forest cover and of biological diversity;
* the capacity for photosynthesis;
* the water cycle;
* food production systems;
* genetic resources; and
* chemicals produced for human use and not found in nature and, eventually, reaching the environment with impacts on Earth's waters, soils,
air, and ecology.
So security must be achieved by other means than wars. We might as well shelved the war industry from humanity right now and that means phasing
out all nuclear, biological, chemical weapons right now. No waiting! That also means having inspectors verifying the phasing out in
all nations of the world. The nature of global security has changed since the rise of the Global Community.
Security used to be about the protection of the state and its boundaries, people, institutions and values from an outside threat.
The Federation emphasizes as a priority the prohibition of external interference in the internal affairs of sovereign states. Today the security of
people within the Global Community is just as important as the security of states. Citizens must be secure. The Global Community is just as important as the security
and life of citizens and states.
Article 3: Terrorism and global co-operation.
There are many threats to security other than the threats to the global life-support systems and threat caused by weapons of mass destruction and the threats to
the sovereignty of a state, and they include:
* the proliferation of conventional small arms;
* the terrorizing of civilian populations by domestic groups; and
* gross violations of global rights.
Global security can only be achieved if it can be shared by all peoples and through global co-operation, based on principles as explained
in this Constitution such as justice, human dignity, and equity for all and for the good of all. All people and states
are protected by Global Community . Security and Peace can be better achieved by increasing global co-operation between Member Nations.
Article 4: The media industry and global security
The media industry includes the movie and television program industry. They are
major sources of global unsecurity. They display a culture of violence in everyday life on television screens and cinemas.
An average child at age six has seen more violence on television
than any other child of the developing countries over a life span. This culture of violence infects both industrial and developing countries,
rich and poor. This trend of culture of violence must end. The movie and TV industry is a threat to global security. The media is
responsible for the propagation of violence through communications. Why has government not done anyhting to regulate the media industry? Surely everyone understood that on the Scale of Global Rights security of a
nation is more important than the human rights related to the freedom of expression of the media industry. Security of the people and the state is
on top of the Scale. It is part of the primordial human rights. While freedom of expression is a right found lower on the Scale and is
classified partly as:
* Community rights and the right that the greatest number of people has by virtue of its number (50% plus one) and after voting representatives democratically
(these rights can be and are usually a part of the constitution of a country); and as
* Economic rights (business and consumer rights, and their responsibilities and accountabilities) and social rights
(civil and political rights).
So the freedom of expression of a person is not as important as the security of that person and the security of the state.
Article 5: Conflicts and wars.
War is the greatest violation of human rights that one people can inflict on another. It brings deaths and injuries, starvation, diseases, millions of people
losing their homes and livelihoods, and massive destruction of property.
Children and teenagers are placed in internment camps, and several are often forced to serve as soldiers. War not only corrupts the morals of soldiers, it leads to a decline
in the morality of the whole nation.
Political and military leaders are always convinced that their particular war is justified. From their point of view, there are several reasons to go
to war: loyalty to allies, religion, a thirst for power, greed, ancient grievances to be settled, or the desire to alleviate suffering among their people.
A non-violent settlement to a conflict would always be more advantageous. War is self-defeating because it cannot secure what it sets out to achieve, protection against attack. The hatred for the enemy
whipped up by war and the desire for revenge among the losers leads to an accursed vicious circle from which there is no escape. The difference between
aggressive and defensive, or just and unjust wars, is ridiculous. They are tags each side adopted to suit its interests. War and militarism destroy civil liberties within a nation.
What happens to a person's conscience when he/she wears the uniform of the soldier? It is enslaved to the state. He must kill when ordered. No government, whether
democratic or despotic, can allow the soldier to decide what to do according to his conscience. That would undermine discipline and the power to fight.
The Federation claims that everyone on Earth should be able to live in peace. This peace
movement is about courage. Not the courage it takes to go into battle but the courage
to organize resistance to war when a bloody taste for it inflames the world, and the threat of prison in a nation where the human rights and freedom of expression have diminished significantly. It is
about the courage to say NO to the war industry. It is an industry that destroys life on Earth, corrupts society, and violates morality. Military intervention
in the affairs of other nations is wrong. There are other ways, there are peaceful ways, ways that are not based on profit-making and the gain of power for itself.
We are conscientious objectors, "non-resistants".
The people of Global Community are dedicated in using the Federation resources to resolve
conflict, promote democracy, and fight hunger, terrorism, disease, and global rights abuses. In order to bring about the event of peace, Global Community
is offering other good organizations around the world to work together to bring warring parties to peace. We can accomplish this task by concrete actions such as:
a) Tracking armed conflicts within and between nations around the world and offering assistance in dispute resolution;
b) Promoting human rights and democracy;
c) Monitoring democratic elections; and
d) Educating the public about the advantages of a peaceful solution to any conflict.
Article 6: Decentralization of power.
The Federation has given
back responsibility to every citizen on Earth. Everyone shares responsibility for the present and future well-being
of life within Member Nations. We will work together in working out sound solutions to local and global problems. It would be wrong and dishonest to
blame it all on the leader of a country. Most problems in the world must find solutions at the local and global community levels (and not assume that the
leader alone is responsible and will handle it). There is a wisdom in the ways of very humble people
that needs to be utilized. Every humble person deserves to have ideas respected, and encouraged to develop his or her own life for the better.
Sound solutions to help manage and sustain Earth will very likely be found this way. Everyone can help assess the needs of the planet and
propose sound solutions for its proper management, present and future. Everyone can think of better ideas to sustain all life on Earth and
realize these ideas by conducting positive and constructive actions. When there is a need to find a solution to a problem or a concern, a sound
solution would be to choose a measure or conduct an action, if possible, which causes reversible damage as opposed to a measure or an
action causing an irreversible loss; that is the grassroots process. The Federation can help people realized their actions by
coordinating efforts efficiently together.
Article 7: Responsibility of a peacemaker.
The responsibility of a peacemaker is to settle differences through compromise and negotiation before they erupt into violence.
Conflicting views do not have to bring about fighting. War is an irreversible solution to a problem. War is never an appropriate solution to resolve
a conflict.
Article 8: The worst environmental degradation happens in wars.
The worst environmental degradation happens in wars. Farm products in fields and livestock are abandoned, there is no more control on toxic wastes, and water, air,
and land are polluted. People are displaced and feel no longer responsible for the quality of life in their communities. Historically, the industrialized nations
have caused the most damage to the environment, with their careless technology and policies. Emissions from factories and vehicles have caused
ozone depletion and acid rain. Leaders of the wealthier nations must be willing to accept responsibility for past mistakes and to help pay the financial burden
for environmental protection of the developing nations. This is the most damaging conflict of interests between the rich industrialized countries
and those that are poor and struggling just for existence. The Federation must help wealthy and poorer nations reach a better understanding of each
other's needs. All aspects are interrelated: peace, human rights and the environment. The poor is more concerned with ending starvation,
finding a proper shelter and employment, and helping their children to survive. Environmental issues become meaningless to the poor. In reality, all concerns are interrelated.
As soon as the environment is destroyed beyond repair, human suffering is next. Ecology has no boundaries. All nations suffer the effects of
air pollution, global warming, loss of biodiversity, soil erosion, acid rain, ozone depletion, silting of streams, and countless of other
environmental problems. This was the reason for proposing the Scale of Global Rights to Global Community .
Article 9: A trusted third party to resolve conflicts.
The Federation wants to provide a forum where international conflicts could be argued and resolved peacefully. Because of hatred and mistrust, disputing
parties always find it difficult to express constructive ideas or proposals. A face-to-face meeting may not even be possible.
The Federation offers to be a trusted
third party that would carry ideas back and forth, put forward new proposals until both sides agree. When both parties feel they have gained more than
they have lost from the process, the outcome is a win-win settlement for peace.
* resolve problems, concerns and issues peacefully;
* reinstate the respect for Earth;
* work with humanity to keep Earth healthy, productive and hospitable for all people and living things;
* bring forth a sustainable global society embracing universal values related to human rights, economic and social justice, respect of nature, peace, responsibility
to one another; and
* help to protect and manage Earth.
Article 10: The "war industry" throughout the world must be put to a complete halt and shelved forever from humanity.
The "war industry" throughout the world must be put to a complete halt and
shelved forever from humanity. The Federation is asking Member Nations
never again to buy their products. The war industry is the "Mother of all
evils in the world". All persons working, directly or indirectly, for the war industry, are responsible
and accountable to humanity and to God for anything happening to their
products after they are sold. Ethical and moral values no longer touch people involved with the war industry. They
dont think that are actually responsible and accountable for spreading evil all
around the world. They think they are "good people", good citizens. Every
single bullet you manufacture you are responsible and accountable for it, all of
you from the President of the company to the employee on the industrial line.
Our Society holds responsibility and accountability as well. And if that bullet
happened to be a nuclear war head then it becomes even more imperative to
held the manufacturer and the people involved responsible and accountable.
Throughout the 20th Century, the war industry has created the worse evil
humanity has ever encountered: the business of conflicts and wars. It is a
business that has made trillions of dollars (American) and will continue to do
so. It has no moral value, no understanding about Life, no respect for anyone
or anything, no law except the ones that it makes for itself, and all its products
are meant to kill and destroy. It has sold its products to the enemies for the
purpose of making more profit. It has subdued governments all over the world
to make them buy war products. It has given trade and way of doing
business in the world a bad reputation and, therefore, it is a threat to the establisment of
business. Although the war industry has a good public image, an image it has made for itself, more lies to the public, when it comes to war equipment it does not really
matter who is the buyer as long as he pays good money.
The Federation promotes the abolition of nuclear weapons: security, sustainability and justice in
a nuclear free future.
Article 11: New way of doing business: you manufacture, produce, mine, farm or create a product, you become responsible and accountable of your product from beginning to end.
It is the same idea for any consumer product in any industry. You manufacture,
produce, mine, farm or create a product, you become responsible and
accountable of your product from beginning to end (to the point where it
actually becomes a waste; you are also responsible for the proper disposable
of the waste).
Article 12: Democracy, Nonviolence, and Peace
1. Strengthen democratic institutions at all levels, and provide transparency and accountability in governance, inclusive participation in decision making, and access to justice:
a. Uphold the right of everyone to receive clear and timely information on environmental matters and all development plans and activities which are likely to affect them or in which they have an interest.
b. Support local, regional and global civil society, and promote the meaningful participation of all interested individuals and organizations in decision making.
c. Protect the rights to freedom of opinion, expression, peaceful assembly, association, and dissent.
d. Institute effective and efficient access to administrative and independent judicial procedures, including remedies and redress for environmental harm and the threat of such harm.
e. Eliminate corruption in all public and private institutions.
f. Strengthen local communities, enabling them to care for their environments, and assign environmental responsibilities to the levels of government where they can be carried out most effectively.
2. Integrate into formal education and life-long learning the knowledge, values, and skills needed for a sustainable way of life:
a. Provide all, especially children and youth, with educational opportunities that empower them to contribute actively to sustainable development.
b. Promote the contribution of the arts and humanities as well as the sciences in sustainability education.
c. Enhance the role of the mass media in raising awareness of ecological and social challenges.
d. Recognize the importance of moral and spiritual education for sustainable living.
3. Treat all living beings with respect and consideration:
a. Prevent cruelty to animals kept in human societies and protect them from suffering.
b. Protect wild animals from methods of hunting, trapping, and fishing that cause extreme, prolonged, or avoidable suffering.
c. Avoid or eliminate to the full extent possible the taking or destruction of non-targeted species.
4. Promote a culture of tolerance, nonviolence, and peace:
a. Encourage and support mutual understanding, solidarity, and cooperation among all peoples and within and among nations.
b. Implement comprehensive strategies to prevent violent conflict and use collaborative problem solving to manage and resolve environmental conflicts and other disputes.
c. Demilitarize national security systems to the level of a non-provocative defense posture, and convert military resources to peaceful purposes, including ecological restoration.
d. Eliminate nuclear, biological, and toxic weapons and other weapons of mass destruction.
e. Ensure that the use of orbital and outer space supports environmental protection and peace.
f. Recognize that peace is the wholeness created by right relationships with oneself, other persons, other cultures, other life, Earth, and the larger whole of which all are a part.
Earth Security and Peace
Chapter 2.2 The threat or use of nuclear weapons are contrary to the rules of international law.
Article 1: The threat or use of nuclear weapons are contrary to the rules of international law.
1. The Federation declares that the threat or use of nuclear weapons are contrary to the rules of international law applicable in armed conflict in any circumstances. Once in effect, the Earth Court of Justice will declare definitively that the threat or use of nuclear weapons is unlawful even in extreme circumstances of self-defense, in which the very survival of a State would be at stake.
2. The Federation declares that when there is a need to find a solution to a problem or a concern, a sound
solution would be to choose a measure or conduct an action, if possible, which causes reversible damage as opposed to a measure or an action causing
an irreversible loss. This Principle applies to disputes and conflicts.
Article 2
States have a legal obligation not only to pursue negotiations leading to nuclear disarmment in all aspects, but also to bring to a conclusion such negotiations.
Article 3
Nuclear weapons, like all weapons, are subject to the law of armed conflict protecting civilians, combatants, the environment, neutral nations, and succeeding generations from the effects of warfare.
Article 4
The Earth Security Council shall determine the existence of any threat to the peace, breach of the peace, or act of aggression and
shall make recommendations, or decide what measures shall be taken in accordance with "Belief, Values, Principles and Aspirations of
the Federation" described in the Preamble and in Chapters 1 to 10 of this Constitution, to maintain or restore international peace and security.
Article 5
In order to prevent an aggravation of the situation, the Earth Security Council may, before making the recommendations or deciding upon
the measures provided for in this Constitution, call upon the parties concerned to comply with such provisional measures as it deems necessary or desirable. Such provisional measures shall be without prejudice to the rights, claims, or position of the parties concerned. The Earth Security Council shall duly take
account of failure to comply with such provisional measures.
Article 6
The Earth Security Council may decide what measures not involving the use of armed force are to be employed to give effect to its
decisions, and it may call upon the Members Nations to apply such measures. These may include complete or partial
interruption of economic relations and of rail, sea, air, postal, telegraphic, radio,and other means of communication, and the severance
of diplomatic relations.
Article 7
1. All Members Nations, in order to contribute to the maintenance of international peace and security, undertake to make available to the Earth Security Council, on its and in accordance with a special agreement or agreements, assistance, and facilities, including rights of passage, necessary for the purpose of
maintaining international peace and security.
2. The action required to carry out the decisions of the Earth Security Council for the maintenance of international
peace and security shall be taken by all Members Nations or by some of them, as the Earth Security Council may determine.
3. Members Nations shall join in affording mutual assistance in carrying out the measures decided upon by the Earth Security Council.
Article 8
If preventive or enforcement measures against any nation are taken by the Earth Security Council, any other nation, whether a Member
Nation or not, which finds itself confronted with special economic problems arising from the carrying out of those
measures shall have the right to consult the Earth Security Council with regard to a solution of those problems.
Chapter 2.3 Settlement of Disputes.
Article 1
1. The parties to any dispute, the continuance of which is likely to endanger the maintenance of international peace and security, shall, first of all, seek a solution by negotiation, enquiry, mediation, conciliation, arbitration, judicial settlement, resort to regional agencies or arrangements, or other peaceful means of their own choice.
2. The Earth Security Council shall, when it deems necessary, call upon the parties to settle their dispute by such means.
3. When there is a need to find a solution to a problem or a concern, a sound solution would be to choose a measure or conduct an action, if possible,
which causes reversible damage as opposed to a measure or an action causing an irreversible loss. This Principle applies to disputes and conflicts.
Article 2
The Earth Security Council may investigate any dispute, or any situation which might lead to international friction or give rise to a dispute, in order to determine whether the continuance of the dispute or situation is likely to endanger the maintenance of international peace and security.
Article 3
l. Any Member Nation may bring any dispute to the attention of the Earth Security Council or of the Elected Representatives Council.
2. A nation which is not a Member Nation may bring to the attention of the Earth Security Council or of the House of Elected Representatives any dispute to which it is a party if it accepts in advance, for the purposes of the dispute, the obligations of pacific settlement provided in the present Constitution.
Article 4
1. The Earth Security Council should take into consideration any procedures for the settlement of the dispute which have already been adopted by the parties.
2. In making recommendations under this Article the Earth Security Council should also take into consideration that legal disputes should as a general rule be referred by the parties to the Earth Court of Justice in accordance with the provisions of the Statute of the Court.
Article 5
If the Earth Security Council deems that the continuance of the dispute is in fact likely to endanger the maintenance of international
peace and security, it shall decide whether to take action under "Belief, Values, Principles and Aspirations of the Federation" described in this Constitution
or to recommend such terms of settlement as it may consider appropriate.
When there is a need to find a solution to a problem or a concern, a sound solution would be to choose a measure or conduct an action,
if possible,
which causes reversible damage as opposed to a measure or an action causing an irreversible loss. This Principle applies to disputes and
conflicts.
Chapter 2.4 Local Arrangements of Disputes.
Article 1
Member Nations shall make every effort to achieve pacific settlement of local disputes through regional arrangements or by
regional agencies before referring them to the Earth Security Council.
Article 2
The Earth Security Council shall, where appropriate, utilize such regional arrangements or agencies for enforcement action under its authority. But no enforcement action shall be taken under regional arrangements or by regional agencies, or by the Earth Security Council.
Chapter 2.5 State and global citizens participation to legal disputes
Article 1
The Federation shall make every efforts to allow global citizens participate in the pacific and legal settlement of disputes.
Chapter III The Federation membership
Article 1: Conditions of eligibility and procedure for accession of Member Nations to the Federation:
1. the Federation shall be open to all Member Nations which respect
the values referred to in Chapter I to Chapter X inclusive, and are committed to promoting them
together.
2. Any Nation which wishes to become a member of the Federation
shall address its application to the Earth Executive Council. The Global Parliament
and Member Nations' national Parliaments shall be notified of this application.
The Earth Executive Council shall act unanimously after consulting the Ministry of the Global Judiciary
and after obtaining the consent of Global Parliament. The conditions
and arrangements for admission shall be the subject of an agreement between
Member Nations and the candidate Nation. That agreement shall be subject
to ratification by each contracting Nation, in accordance with its respective
constitutional requirements.
Article 2: Suspension of the Federation membership rights
1. On a reasoned proposal by one third of Member Nations, by the Global
Parliament or by the Global Judiciary , the Earth Executive Council, acting by a majority
of four fifths of its members after obtaining the consent of Global
Parliament, may adopt a decision determining that there is a clear
risk of a serious breach by a Member Nation of the values mentioned in Chapter 1 to Chapter 10 inclusive.
Before making such a determination, the Earth Executive Council shall
hear the Member Nation in question and, acting in accordance with the same
procedure, may address recommendations to that Nation. The Earth Executive Council
shall regularly verify that the grounds on which such a determination was
made continue to apply.
2. The United Nations , acting by unanimity on a proposal by one third
of Member Nations or by the Global Judiciary and after obtaining the consent
of Global Parliament , may adopt a decision determining the
existence of a serious and persistent breach by a Member Nation of the values
mentioned in Chapter 1 to Chapter 10 inclusive, after inviting the Member Nation in question to
submit its observations.
3. Where a determination under paragraph 2 has been made, the Earth Executive Council,
acting by a qualified majority, may adopt a decision
suspending certain of the rights deriving from the application of the Constitution
to the Member Nation in question, including the voting rights of that Member
Nation in the Earth Executive Council. In so doing, the Earth Executive Council
shall take into account the possible consequences of such a suspension on
the rights and obligations of natural and legal persons. That Member Nation
shall in any case continue to be bound by its obligations under the Constitution.
4. The Earth Executive Council, acting by a qualified majority, may subsequently
adopt a decision varying or revoking measures taken under paragraph
3 in response to changes in the situation which led to their being imposed.
5. For the purposes of this Article, the Earth Executive Council shall act
without taking into account the vote of the Member Nation in question.
Abstentions by members present in person or represented shall not prevent
the adoption of decisions referred to in paragraph 2. This paragraph shall
also apply in the event of voting rights being suspended pursuant to paragraph 3.
6. For the purposes of paragraphs 1 and 2, Global Parliament shall
act by a two-thirds majority of the votes cast, representing the majority
of its Members.
Article 3: Voluntary withdrawal from the Federation
1. Any Member Nation may decide to withdraw from the Federation
in accordance with its own constitutional requirements.
2. A Member Nation which decides to withdraw shall notify Global parliament
of its intention; Global parliament shall examine that notification.
In the light of the guidelines provided by Global parliament, Earth
Government shall negotiate and conclude an agreement with that Nation, setting
out the arrangements for its withdrawal, taking account of the framework
for its future relationship with the Federation. That agreement shall
be concluded on behalf of the Federation by the Earth Executive Council,
acting by a qualified majority, after obtaining the consent of Global
Parliament. The representative of the withdrawing Member Nation shall not
participate in the Earth Executive Council or Global Parliament discussions or decisions
concerning it.
3. The Constitution shall cease to apply to the Nation in question from
the date of entry into force of the withdrawal agreement or, failing that,
two years after the notification referred to in paragraph 2, unless the Global Parliament, in agreement with the
Member Nation concerned, decides to extend this period.
4. If a Nation which has withdrawn from the Federation asks to re-join,
its request shall be subject to the standard application procedure.
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