
Alex Ugorji
Wednesday, March 05, 2025

1/
— Alex Ugorji (@AlexUgorji_) March 5, 2025
The recent ICSID international court ruling was a big win for both the ZEDEs and the Charter City movement as a whole! ✨
In this week's Morazan Monday I'll explain why 📢
🧵👇 pic.twitter.com/0bcTib7e5Q
3/ Most of this was done under a radical left-wing government which campaigned on dismantling the charter city (ZEDE) regime without compensation in violation of Honduras' constitution and investor protection treaties 📜 pic.twitter.com/JIZsQ3MP6l
— Alex Ugorji (@AlexUgorji_) March 5, 2025
5/ For almost two years now the lawyers have been writing strongly worded letters 📜
— Alex Ugorji (@AlexUgorji_) March 5, 2025
With Prospera has been pushing to quickly get a judgement while the Honduran side pushed to slow things down and try to get the case dismissed ⏳ pic.twitter.com/ZkUF8DNuel
7/ If Prospera wins the case, the Honduran government will have millions, maybe even billions of reasons to restore Prospera and the ZEDE's constitutional and treaty rights 🥳
— Alex Ugorji (@AlexUgorji_) March 5, 2025
Especially since they have a lot other investor suits to deal with 👨⚖️https://t.co/FQOo1IckV2

I am Joyce Brand, Governance Architect.
My work documents and maps the structural conditions that enable voluntary, contractual governance to deliver durable prosperity—observed in real zones like Ciudad Morazán, where aligned incentives have produced security, entrepreneurship, and community flourishing despite political hostility.
Just as personal resilience emerges from deliberate, aligned choices (reversing long-term health challenges through disciplined action), jurisdictional antifragility arises from substrates designed to withstand pressure.
These Insights chronicle observations, analyses, and lessons from the frontier of consent-based systems.
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