The Green Empire of the East and the West – A new societal, alter globalist and post institutional order as a systemic and cross disciplinary response to the excesses of globalized capitalism.pdf

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The Green Empire of the East and the West – A new societal, alter-globalist and post-institutional order as a
systemic and cross-disciplinary response to the excesses of globalized capitalism
1 – A Post-Institutional vision and Collaborative Governance
Paul Elvere DELSART is building a new societal order, described as a post-institutional alter-globalist movement, in
response to the shortcomings of current structures, which he deems obsolete, unjust, and incapable of addressing
global challenges. His approach is rooted in a determined will to transcend traditional political, economic, and diplomatic
models by proposing an alternative based on citizen participation, local sovereignty, ethics, ecology, and collective
intelligence.
He envisions a global system called EL4DEV, with its cornerstone being the Think and Do Tank LE PAPILLON
SOURCE EL4DEV, serving as both an intellectual and operational body. This program calls for the creation of a new
societal world order structured around experimental and symbolic constructs: the Vegetal Calderas and the LE
PAPILLON SOURCE agroclimatic and educational cities and complexes. These places are designed to function as
centers for research, education, transnational cooperation, and sustainable development experimentation. They are akin
to modern-day “Templar commanderies,” symbolizing a renewed philosophical, spiritual, and civic order.
Paul Elvere DELSART promotes a post-institutional vision, as he rejects the current international institutions, which he
sees as ineffective, elitist, and driven by economic domination. In their place, he proposes a global network of
decentralized Politico-Societal Unions, structured through Societal Economic Interest Groups that bring together
citizens, rural municipalities, and alternative development actors. These groups enable collaborative, inclusive, and
horizontal governance, breaking with the verticality of traditional nation-states.
His project is alter-globalist in nature because it does not reject the idea of globalization, but seeks to reinvent its
essence. It replaces the current economic globalization dominated by multinational corporations with a societal
globalization, where cultural, intellectual, and environmental exchanges take precedence over the logic of profit. It aims
to connect people through shared goals of progress, sovereignty, autonomy, and respect for all living beings.
This construction of a new order relies on a coherent set of tools: an information system (the EL4DEV Big Smart Data),
non-conventional diplomacy (societal diplomacy), pilot infrastructures, and a transmedia narrative designed to engage
collective imagination. Paul Elvere DELSART thus envisions a fiction-reality in which the boundary between literary
utopia and concrete action is intentionally blurred, in order to actively engage citizens in transforming the real world.
In short, Paul Elvere DELSART is building this new order as a systemic and cross-disciplinary response to the excesses
of globalized capitalism, the dead ends of centralized states, and the current ecological and spiritual crises. He does not
aim to reform the existing system, but rather to transcend it through a radical re-foundation of human cooperation,
based on a new collective consciousness, participatory social engineering, and a shared art of living on a planetary
scale.
2 – A comprehensive model and a disruptive vision
Paul Elvere DELSART puts forward a comprehensive model and a disruptive vision, as he seeks to provoke a deep
rupture with current systems, which he considers ill-suited to humanity’s contemporary challenges. His project, through
the EL4DEV program, is not about simply reforming or improving existing structures—it aims to entirely redefine the
very foundations of how human societies are organized. This radical approach is, in itself, destabilizing, as it challenges
established paradigms across governance, economics, education, diplomacy, culture, and even spirituality.