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Descripción
Moving Towards Global Peace Establishment presents the Global Cooperative Alignment Framework (GCAF), a systematic approach to addressing the persistent limitations of existing international governance systems. Despite the presence of global institutions intended to promote peace and stability, interstate conflict continues to emerge, revealing a fundamental structural gap: the absence of a unified, equilibrium-based coordination mechanism among sovereign states.
This work argues that sustainable peace cannot be achieved through reactive diplomacy, temporary alliances, or fragmented institutional arrangements alone. Instead, it proposes a shift toward a structurally engineered global order grounded in rational cooperation. The GCAF introduces a minimal set of civilizational constraints that respect state sovereignty while guiding interactions toward stability. It further develops a stability-based evaluation model that enables states to assess policies and decisions in terms of their long-term systemic impact, alongside a structured intellectual resolution system designed to transform conflict into reasoned, non-destructive engagement.
Expanding significantly on its foundational green paper, this book provides a comprehensive theoretical and structural exposition of cooperative global alignment. It explores the philosophical foundations of peace as equilibrium, the operational architecture required for sustained cooperation, and the practical challenges involved in aligning diverse political systems without imposing centralized authority.
Rather than seeking ideological uniformity, the framework redefines peace as a self-sustaining condition emerging from properly aligned incentives and constraints. By bridging political theory, systems thinking, and international relations, this work offers a new paradigm for understanding global stability—one in which peace, freedom, and civilizational development are not imposed outcomes in complex governance, but natural consequences of coherent structural design.