
Alex Ugorji
Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Almost nobody has heard of Salamanca School, yet its ideas profoundly shaped Western law, ethics, and economics 👨🎓
— Alex Ugorji (@AlexUgorji_) March 12, 2025
However, there’s one place where these thinkers are well-known: Ciudad Morazán 🌆
In this week's Morazan Monday you'll learn why! 😁
🧵👇 pic.twitter.com/OQhEaxX5CI
3/ Yet, despite their influence, they are largely forgotten today outside of Ciudad Morazán 🌆
— Alex Ugorji (@AlexUgorji_) March 12, 2025
Why? Because the five streets of Morazan's first residential block are named after them🪧
Thanks to Massimo's choice of streets names, residents see Salamanca scholars every day! 🙈 pic.twitter.com/n9yjG5UfnB
5/ So while much of the world has forgotten these intellectual giants, their legacy is alive in Ciudad Morazán 🙏
— Alex Ugorji (@AlexUgorji_) March 12, 2025
We not only remember their names and ideas, we live them🕊️ pic.twitter.com/uMwjhM5aOo

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.
© 2025– The Morazan Model