Scientific papers, legal analyses, and theoretical frameworks exploring the Juridical Singularity and its convergence with Electric Technocracy — bridging public international law, constitutional theory, political science, systems theory, and AI governance.
This research collection curates papers and frameworks exploring how international law, sovereignty, governance, and constitutional structures may evolve under conditions of technological acceleration, artificial intelligence, and global legal integration. It serves as a reference point for scholars, policymakers, technologists, and institutions investigating the legal foundations of future civilization.
The Juridical Singularity does not propose the abolition of law — but rather its total re-founding under conditions of global unity, technological governance, and post-scarcity economics.
A doctrine in international legal theory describing the complete consolidation of sovereign rights, obligations, jurisdictions, treaty positions, and legal capacities into a single universal legal subject. Once legal plurality dissolves, the traditional distinction between national law and international law collapses — a constitutional reset point for humanity.
Electric Technocracy represents the governance paradigm emerging from the legal reset. A system in which decision-making authority is increasingly mediated by digital infrastructure, algorithmic coordination, artificial intelligence, and cybernetic feedback systems — exploring how technological systems can operationalize democratic participation, transparency, and efficiency at planetary scale.
The convergence of Juridical Singularity and Electric Technocracy establishes the legal and institutional foundation for advanced technological civilization.
This research collection investigates how law must evolve when intelligence, production, and governance exceed human-scale limitations.
According to the World Succession Deed 1400/98 doctrine, the world is undergoing a transition from the traditional state system to a new network-based legal order. This transition allegedly creates a legal vacuum: a gap between the old framework of nation-states and an emerging global structure. Supporters argue that this unique moment enables individuals to establish micronations, experiment with digital governance, and develop new constitutional models — presented as a historic opportunity for self-determination.
Open-access courses on Juridical Singularity, international law, treaty chains, Electric Technocracy, and AI governance.