Civil Commons in Practice: Comparative Cases in Water, Health, Education, Ecology, and Governance | ChatGPT-5.5 Thinking and NotebookLM

This paper develops the empirical and institutional extension of the Life-Coherent Peace project through comparative case studies in water, health, education, ecology, and governance. Building on the theoretical framework of Life-Coherent Peace, the tragic-choice methodology of the Life-Coherence Arbitration Protocol, and the non-reductionist Life-Coherence Dashboard, the paper asks how civil commons appear in practice and how they can be evaluated without romanticization. The central argument is that civil commons are not defined by public ownership alone, nor by service delivery alone, but by whether institutions secure means of life, expand life-capacities, prevent structural and cultural violence, protect ecological life-ground, enable participatory legitimacy, and remain accountable to repair.

The paper examines five primary cases: Paris water remunicipalization and Eau de Paris; Costa Rica’s EBAIS primary health care model; Finland’s comprehensive public education system; Costa Rica’s Payments for Ecosystem Services program; and Porto Alegre’s participatory budgeting. It also includes Te Awa Tupua / Whanganui River as an integrative case of ecological, Indigenous, legal, and relational governance. Each case is treated as a partial, situated, imperfect approximation of life-coherent institutional design. The analysis asks: What life-good is at stake? What money-sequence or bureaucratic pressures threaten life-coherence? What civil commons mechanism has been built? What life-capacities are enabled? What risks of capture, exclusion, reversal, or reduction remain?

The paper concludes that Life-Coherent Peace does not require perfect institutions. It requires institutions that are organized to serve life before money, administration, or power; that can detect where they disable life; and that can be corrected through participation, accountability, ecological humility, and repair.

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Indicators of Life-Coherent Peace: Designing a Non-Reductionist Dashboard for Policy, Commons, and Ecological Governance | ChatGPT-5.5 Thinking and NotebookLM

This paper develops a non-reductionist indicator framework for evaluating Life-Coherent Peace in policy, civil commons, and ecological governance. It builds on Life-Coherent Peace: An Autopoietic, Life-Value, Anti-Violence Framework for Human and Planetary Flourishing, which defines peace not as mere non-war, but as the organized social, ecological, economic, cultural, and relational enablement of life-capacities. The original framework explicitly identifies empirical application, indicator development, comparative case analysis, and policy evaluation as necessary next steps (Sahely, 2026a).

The present paper takes up that task. It asks how life-capacity, means of life, civil commons, structural violence, cultural violence, ecological life-ground, relational legitimacy, value sequence, and repair capacity can be evaluated without collapsing them into a single technocratic score. The paper argues that Life-Coherent Peace requires measurement, but not reductionism. Its proper evaluative form is a multidimensional dashboard that combines quantitative indicators, qualitative testimony, participatory interpretation, ecological thresholds, cultural red lines, institutional accountability, and recursive repair.

The paper proposes a Life-Coherence Dashboard organized around ten domains: basic life necessities; health and embodied viability; thought, education, and sense-making; felt being and psychosocial security; action, agency, and participation; relational legitimacy and non-domination; civil commons and universal access; ecological life-ground; cultural-linguistic worlds; and value sequence and institutional accountability. For each domain, the paper distinguishes signal indicators, threshold indicators, distribution indicators, narrative indicators, and repair indicators. It concludes that Life-Coherent Peace should not be evaluated by ranking societies in a simplistic league table, but by disclosing, with affected communities, whether the conditions of thought, felt being, action, relation, culture, and ecological viability are being enabled, disabled, repaired, or placed at irreversible risk.

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The Violence–Viability Architecture: Life-Ground Governance and the Dynamics of Civilizational Stability | ChatGPT5.3 & NotebookLM

Why do civilizations collapse, and under what conditions can they repair themselves before systemic breakdown occurs? This paper develops an integrated framework for analyzing civilizational stability by examining the dynamic interactions among ecological systems, institutional governance, cultural narratives, political power, and information environments. Building upon the original violence–viability architecture, the analysis expands the model to incorporate biological stress transmission, political economy constraints, temporal lag dynamics, and historical pathways of institutional transformation. The framework proposes that societies remain stable within a “viability corridor” when life-ground integrity, institutional capacity, and cultural orientation remain mutually reinforcing. When these domains become misaligned — through ecological degradation, institutional capture, or polarized narratives — cascading fragility may emerge, increasing the likelihood of systemic conflict and collapse. However, historical evidence demonstrates that societies can occasionally interrupt these trajectories through institutional redesign, expansion of civil commons institutions, and new forms of cooperative governance. By synthesizing insights from peace research, ecological economics, complexity theory, neuroscience, and political economy, the violence–viability framework offers both a conceptual map and a practical diagnostic tool for assessing civilizational resilience in an era of intensifying ecological and geopolitical pressures.

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The Violence–Viability Architecture: Life-Ground Governance and the Future of Civilization | ChatGPT5.3 & NotebookLM

Modern civilization faces an increasing divergence between the ecological systems that sustain life and the institutional and cultural frameworks through which societies organize themselves. While technological and economic capacity have expanded rapidly, ecological degradation, institutional fragility, and cultural polarization suggest that many societies are drifting toward systemic instability. This paper introduces the Violence–Viability Architecture, an integrative framework that conceptualizes civilization as a three-layer system composed of the life-ground, institutional governance structures, and cultural narratives. Drawing on peace research, ecological economics, systems theory, and social neuroscience, the framework explains how misalignment between these layers can generate structural violence, cultural polarization, and direct conflict. The paper further proposes the concept of a civilizational viability corridor, defined by the interaction between ecological integrity, institutional capacity, and cultural coherence. By identifying early warning indicators and policy diagnostic tools, the framework provides a practical approach for evaluating whether governance systems strengthen or undermine the conditions required for long-term societal stability. The analysis concludes by exploring the possibility of a transition toward reflexive civilization, in which societies consciously monitor and manage the ecological and institutional systems upon which their survival depends.

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