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

Aperçu texte
They would be co-owners of the infrastructures, stakeholders in the economic returns, no longer mere recipients of
conditional funds.
The forested South, the volcanoes of the West, and the northern savannas would become destinations for scientific,
educational, and spiritual tourism. Visitors from around the world would come to live an immersive experience in a
reimagined Cameroon.
This system would stimulate the informal economy while organizing it around mechanisms of fair redistribution. Rural
micro-entrepreneurs, women, and youth would find a secure framework to create and innovate.
However, initial funding would be difficult to secure. Networks of corruption, administrative instability, and bureaucratic
delays could slow implementation.
As the homeland of Paul Elvere DELSART, Cameroon would have a unique legitimacy to become the cradle of a new
pan-African vision. Through the EL4DEV program, the country could embody a post-Western political philosophy, rooted
in ecology, intellect, and cultural cooperation.
It could play a central role in founding an African Societal Union, alongside key countries like Ethiopia, Morocco,
Senegal, or Ghana.
This non-aligned but ambitious diplomacy would allow Cameroon to break with extractivist or militarized models
imposed by certain foreign powers (France, China, Russia…). It would lay the foundation for a new African humanism.
Yet such a stance could trigger geopolitical friction. Former economic partners, unwilling to lose privileges, might exert
political, financial, or media pressure.
If Cameroon dared to undertake this transformation — if it truly adopted the EL4DEV program as a national matrix — it
could:
•
•
•
Break with a post-colonial model based on aid and dependency;
Revitalize its rural areas, reduce poverty, and curb rural exodus;
Shine as a beacon of cooperative, ecological, spiritual, and creative Pan-Africanism.
But this transformation would not come from the top. It would require:
•
•
•
A sincere commitment from political elites, willing to share power with the territories;
The mobilization of younger generations, ready to return, create, and dream here rather than elsewhere;
And above all, collective resilience, capable of overcoming structural blockages, mental inertia, and external
threats.
For any country that dares to invent a new civilization must first have the courage to believe in itself.
Chapter 5 – Spain: The vanguard of a Euro-Mediterranean Renaissance
Among the many territories mentioned in the EL4DEV program, Spain holds a unique position — not merely as a
potential candidate, but as a pilot land, the initial anchor point for an unprecedented civilizational experiment. It was in
the municipality of Torreblanca, located in the province of Castellón, that the first foundations of this vision were laid.
What if Spain decided to transform this local initiative into a national project? What if it fully embraced the political,
ethical, and ecological path promoted by Paul Elvere DELSART? Such a decision would redefine not only Spain’s future
but potentially that of the entire Euro-Mediterranean region.