
The Treaty for Regenerative Peace & Human Sovereignty
A voluntary, technology-enabled protocol treaty that makes resource war structurally irrational — by making local, regenerative provisioning cheaper, more resilient, and more sovereign than extractive competition. Five volumes give leaders a practical path from aspiration to measurable abundance.
Peace = Abundance + Decentralization + Coherence
Resource wars persist when energy, water, food, manufacturing, money, and governance are centralized into scarcity chokepoints.
The Treaty does not ask the world to manage scarcity more politely. It asks the world to make scarcity obsolete wherever technology, governance, culture, and finance can do so — replacing chokepoints with distributed regenerative capacity across the Twelve Resource Realms.
It honors Indigenous nations, elders, cultures, languages, and living watershed knowledge as essential sources of law and design. This is the strategy of constructive replacement: build the operating system that makes the old scarcity stack increasingly expensive, brittle, and unnecessary — outperformed node by node.
The Five Volumes
A complete, opt-in package drafted for diplomatic, tribal, municipal, corporate, philanthropic, and technical review.
Formal Treaty Document
The full instrument — preamble, foundational clauses, the Universal Resource Sovereignty Charter, measurement and certification, institutions, finance, dispute resolution, and accession. The binding architecture that can operate as treaty, compact, charter, and corporate covenant at once.
Executive Summary for Leaders
The diplomatic and strategic brief. The one-page case, why a treaty rather than another goal list, how the six working layers function, who signs and what they receive, governance safeguards, and the Pacific-first ask. Start here.
Implementation Playbook
The practical guide for turning the Treaty into projects: the 100-day launch, baseline diagnostics, ReGen Hub formation, twelve-realm project design, Peace Engineer chapter operations, the finance stack, quarterly reporting, and risk management.
Technical Standards Manual
Metrics, certification, and data architecture for the Twelve Resource Realms — the metric architecture, realm standards, data and API requirements, certification and audit protocol, technology verification levels, and data sovereignty rules.
Model National & Tribal Legislation
Ready-to-adapt template laws — a national implementation act, tribal nation resolution, city ordinance, corporate compact, ReGen Hub charter, infrastructure fund act, procurement policy, data trust clauses, and accession instrument.
Six Working Layers
The Treaty operates as an integrated stack — each layer turns intention into accountable, measurable capability.
Legal Layer
Defines signatories, rights, duties, accession paths, dispute resolution, and safeguards.
Measurement Layer
Uses Pe, CVI, and the twelve realm metrics to turn peace into measurable infrastructure performance.
Deployment Layer
Builds ReGen Hubs and Peace Engineer chapters to implement projects on the ground.
Technology Layer
Creates open standards, a technology commons, interoperability, and verified performance categories.
Finance Layer
Creates Peace Infrastructure Funds, certified procurement, insurance benefits, and impact-linked investment.
Governance Layer
Multi-chamber participation, Indigenous council oversight, transparency, and anti-capture rules.
Who Signs & What They Receive
Each signatory adopts obligations appropriate to its legal capacity — a nation ratifies, a tribe accedes by resolution, a city adopts by ordinance, a company by board resolution.
Nation-States
A national implementation framework for infrastructure, resilience, diplomacy, and post-SDG leadership.
Tribal Nations & Indigenous Governments
A treaty-compatible vehicle for watershed stewardship, technology partnership, cultural protection, and sovereign finance.
Regions & Cities
A practical local development framework with measurable realm improvements and finance readiness.
Corporations
A stronger alternative to ESG — measurable peace accounting, supply-chain resilience, and trusted market access.
Investors & Funds
A pipeline of certified regenerative infrastructure with transparent metrics and risk-reduction logic.
Universities & Labs
A living laboratory for open standards, applied research, education, and validation.
Communities
Local capability, reduced dependency, better services, training, ownership, and voice.
A Geography of Trust
The first move is Pacific-first — where the economics of fuel, water, food, and shipping are visible, and the cultural logic is already aligned. Washington, Alaska, Hawaii, and Indigenous Pacific partners.
Convene
Secure founding signatories, legal review, standards committee, data registry, and first funding commitments.
Pacific Proof
Launch initial hubs and realm baselines in Colville, Anacortes, Yakutat, Hawaii, and willing partner communities.
Island & Remote Replication
Expand to communities with high energy, water, food, and logistics costs.
Continental Networks
Build regional hub constellations and finance stacks on every continent.
Global Recognition
Mutual recognition of certifications, standards, reporting, procurement, and treaty benefits.
A Founding Coalition Willing to Sign, Measure, Build, and Prove
The immediate ask is not global ratification. Five to twelve serious founding parties are enough to begin — one tribal nation, one city or county, one state or province, one manufacturing partner, one university, one aligned investor, one philanthropic funder, and one ReGen Hub operator.
Within 100 days, that coalition can publish the Treaty, seat interim working groups, complete initial community baselines, identify the first twelve realm projects, and launch the diplomatic invitation. That is not fantasy — that is project management with a cape.
Publisher notice: This five-volume package is a first working edition of the PEACE Treaty framework, drafted for diplomatic, tribal, municipal, corporate, philanthropic, and technical review. It is not legal advice, does not create binding obligations until adopted by a competent signatory authority, and should be reviewed by counsel in each jurisdiction before use. Prepared by Raven Rolland Gregg (Keeta Yeil of the Lukaax̱.ádi Clan) · First Working Edition, July 2026.