
Alex Ugorji
Tuesday, June 04, 2024

In this week's Morazan Monday (a weekly series on Ciudad Morazán / Bootstrap City) we learn why Ciudad Morazan is the cleanest city in Honduras! 🇭🇳 🏆
— Alex Ugorji (@AlexUgorji_) June 4, 2024
👇🧵 pic.twitter.com/GoUEFEhPMP
1) Public Trash Cans 🗑️
— Alex Ugorji (@AlexUgorji_) June 4, 2024
Many places in Honduras are lacking in trash cans but not Morazan! It has >1 trash can per 5 households 🏡
Trash cans are put in busy areas such as the park, street corners, and the construction site👷
Importantly, trash is emptied 6 days per week! 📅 pic.twitter.com/Egd3jz6bQq
3) Zero Tolerance of Littering
— Alex Ugorji (@AlexUgorji_) June 4, 2024
In Morazan, any resident seen littering will be informed that such behavior is unacceptable. 🚫
Then they will be asked to clean up their mess 🧹
Since there is no crime in Morazan, police have the time to look out for litters 😉 pic.twitter.com/JzCqKnkCes
Morazan City makes keeping a city clean look easy💪
— Alex Ugorji (@AlexUgorji_) June 4, 2024
But, with good policies and incentives, it kind of is 😉
If you want to learn more about what is easy, interesting, and fun about Morazan, then be sure to join us next week for another Morazan Monday! 👋 pic.twitter.com/2Km3hsU5kc

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