The sociopolitical vision of Paul Elvere DELSART – Toward a participatory global governance.pdf

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At the heart of this transformation lies a key word: transmission. Education would be reimagined as a lever for social
transformation. The LE PAPILLON SOURCE infrastructures — halfway between campus, educational oasis, and living
space — would welcome rural youth, researchers, inventors, artists — both Moroccan and international.
There, one would not learn to replicate, but to reinvent: systemic engineering, ecospirituality, cooperation, ancient
languages, and vernacular arts.
A new form of Moroccan soft power would emerge, rooted in sustainability, beauty, and human interconnection.
Ancestral Berber, Arab, and Andalusian knowledge would be revisited through the lens of contemporary challenges.
The challenge, however, would be immense: reforming an education system often rigid, hierarchical, and ill-suited to
rural realities. Teachers would need retraining, curricula rewritten, and the very purpose of school redefined.
Economically, the transition would be just as radical. Mass tourism, concentrated in imperial cities and coastal zones,
would give way to educational, scientific, and spiritual tourism. Visitors would come to Morocco not to consume, but to
learn, meditate, and create.
Rural municipalities would achieve financial autonomy by generating their own resources through eco-construction,
permaculture, and technological craftsmanship.
Thousands of jobs would be created — but within a cooperative framework, where wealth is shared.
Yet the hurdles would be considerable. Initial investments — to build infrastructure, train people, and ensure the energy
transition — would be heavy. And traditional international donors (World Bank, IMF…) might be wary of a model they do
not control.
On the geopolitical front, Morocco could assume an unprecedented role: that of a bridge between continents, a moral
leader within a Mediterranean Societal Union.
With partners like Tunisia, Portugal, or southern Spain, it could become the engine of a Mediterranean alter-globalism
based on peace, cultural cooperation, and citizen diplomacy.
The goal would no longer be to align with blocs of power, but to create a middle path: neither neoliberal nor
authoritarian, but humanist, ecological, rooted and open.
Such a repositioning, however, could provoke resistance. By challenging classic economic agreements or strategic
alliances, the country could face diplomatic and economic pressures.
If Morocco were to embrace the vision of Paul Elvere DELSART, it would not merely be a country in transition — it
would become a civilizational prototype, a forward base for a new world.
But such a transformation would require three key elements:
1. A strong and courageous political will.
2. The mobilization of local forces: youth, municipalities, researchers, social entrepreneurs.
3. A shift in mindset among the elites, moving from control to facilitation, from domination to cooperation.
The road would be filled with obstacles, but rich in hope. For those who dare to reinvent society do more than pave a
path — they open a new era.
Chapter 4 – Cameroon at the crossroads of worlds