A debate on the proposed Destiny Special Sustainability Zone in Nevis and the question of whether large-scale private development can serve small-island sustainability — or whether hidden agreements, legal exceptionalism, monetized consent, and ecological uncertainty risk trading sovereignty for short-term financial relief. Read More
Tag: public participation
Episode 26: The Hidden Cost of Nevis’s Destiny: A Life-Coherent Governance Analysis
A deep dive into the proposed Destiny Special Sustainability Zone in Nevis and the hidden costs of enclosed development. This episode asks whether promises of jobs, hospitals, renewable energy, profit-sharing, and cash transfers can be legitimate without full public disclosure, ecological proof, constitutional safeguards, and genuine democratic consent. Read More
Destiny, Enclosure, or Life-Coherent Development? A Maturana-Informed Governance Analysis of the Proposed Special Sustainability Zone in Nevis | ChatGPT-5.5 Thinking and NotebookLM
This academic white paper examines the proposed Destiny Special Sustainability Zone in Nevis as a critical test case for small-island development, democratic legitimacy, ecological resilience, and constitutional self-determination. Using a Maturana-informed life-coherent framework, it argues that the project cannot be responsibly evaluated as an ordinary real-estate, tourism, or infrastructure proposal. Because the Destiny proposal is being advanced through the Special Sustainability Zones Authorisation Act, 2025, it raises broader questions concerning Development Agreement governance, public law, land, water, ecology, public participation, fiscal exposure, labour, citizenship, security, cultural continuity, and future generations.
The paper’s central finding is that Destiny should not proceed to approval under conditions of incomplete disclosure, unresolved rule-of-law concern, ecological uncertainty, and insufficient public co-design. This is not a rejection of development as such. Rather, it is a call to ensure that any development strengthens the life-ground of Nevis: its people, land, water, law, culture, ecology, public trust, democratic authorship, and intergenerational future.
The white paper proposes a Covenant Redesign Process: pause, disclose, independently assess, publicly deliberate, redesign, and only then decide. It calls for full release of the Development Agreement, constitutional safeguards, ordinary court jurisdiction, ecological proof, water-positive and energy-positive obligations, permanent public access, fiscal transparency, local ownership, dignified labour, ethical benefit-sharing, and formal representation of future generations.