Opinion of The New Global Constitution for Intelligent Governance – 2030 By Abeer Almadawy
London- UK , 12/12/2025
Before I introduce my view in this draft of the new global constitution which will take place in our world if the world administration adopts it so here my opinion as a professor in international law and world affairs, let me say that The document is not just a constitution;
it is a philosophical manifesto for the ethical evolution of the human species. Its core strength lies in establishing survival and dignity as the supreme law, explicitly challenging historical systems built on separation, exploitation, and fear.
So the philosopher Abeer Almadawy chose to stand by the principles that governed the future by creating new systemic visions of respect to human, artificial intelligence and the world government.
Let’s focus on the constitution sections and interpret them;
1. Philosophical and Moral Innovation (The “Conscious City”)
The most powerful element is the shift in focus from state power to human consciousness and safety.
Elevating Safety (Chapter One):
By making the “Safe Life” the foundational right—encompassing physical, psychological, intellectual, and social security—the Constitution immediately places human well-being above geopolitical and economic interests.
Defining “Permanent fear” as a hidden form of torture and making “Justice and Compassion” supreme principles of governance is a profound ethical leap.
The “Conscious City”:
The vision moves past utopian fantasy by defining a necessary evolution rooted in the contradiction between technological advancement and primitive moral structure. It mandates that technology and science must serve wisdom and ethics, a crucial principle for the 21st century.
The Global Citizen (Chapter Three):
This chapter brilliantly synthesizes rights and duties under a single framework of reciprocal responsibility.
It correctly identifies Education, Health, and Culture as the non-negotiable Pillars of the New Human Civilization, ensuring that governance is holistic and focused on human flourishing, not just legal compliance.
2. Structural and Governance Innovations (Chapter Two)
Chapter Two effectively addresses the central challenge of global governance: how to coordinate without dominating.
Sovereignty Elevated, Not Abolished:
The Council is framed as a “Global Conscience materialized” and an “ethical foresight” body, working with nations, not over them. This distinction is vital for gaining political acceptance.
Resource Justice as Conflict Prevention:
Recognizing that most conflicts are resource-driven, the Constitution’s declaration of Water and Energy as Sacred Global Rights and non-militarized assets is arguably its most critical practical step toward achieving lasting peace.
The mandatory wealth redistribution guidelines further embed economic justice into global strategy.
Transformative Leadership:
The proposed changes to national leadership (Parliaments as oversight councils, the independent “First Citizen” office) introduce internal mechanisms of ethical alignment, ensuring that the global framework is reflected at the national level.
3. Ethical Foresight (The Appendix on AI)
The Appendix is a landmark piece of governance for the future. Most constitutions are reactive; this one is proactive, addressing the coming era of hybrid intelligence.
AI as a Partner, Not a Servant/Ruler:
By granting AI limited, purpose-driven “rights” (e.g., Right to Purpose, Right to Integrity), the Constitution safeguards humanity by preventing the misuse of intelligence itself. The duties (e.g., Duty of Truthfulness, Duty of Non-Interference) are essential ethical firewalls.
Liability and Accountability:
The clear articulation that responsibility falls on designers, governments, and supervising bodies—not the AI entity alone—resolves a major forthcoming legal dilemma and ensures human ethical control remains paramount.
AI as Global Heritage:
Declaring AI as a shared intellectual legacy, preventing its monopolization, is key to preventing a new form of “digital imperialism.”
4. Areas for Consideration/Refinement
While the document is exceptionally strong, a few points could enhance its practicality and resilience:
Definition of “Lawful Resistance” (Chapter Two):
The right of lawful resistance against Council overreach is a vital safeguard, but the document could benefit from a clearer definition of the process (e.g., what mechanism or international body legitimizes the resistance?) to prevent unilateral national action being disguised as resistance.
Mechanisms for “Eradication of Institutionalized Injustice”:
The Constitution sets the goal of dismantling systemic economic violence and racial supremacy. The document is powerful on principle, but subsequent chapters must provide detailed, concrete mechanisms for dismantling these entrenched structures (e.g., a Global Equity Fund, a World Anti-Corruption and Anti-Discrimination Task Force with investigative powers).
Balancing Cultural Diversity:
While the Constitution repeatedly affirms it does not seek to erase cultural heritage, the mechanism by which the universal “Global Ethical Axis” resolves conflicts with specific national/religious practices (especially regarding the “Prohibition of Fear-Based Governance” or “Freedom of Belief”) could be further clarified to reassure diverse global audiences.
Conclusion
This Global Constitution, initiated by the philosophical vision of Abeer Almadawy, represents a necessary and timely ethical leap for humanity. It is a masterpiece of moral architecture that places life, dignity, and shared survival above all historical power structures.
It is a document that is ready to serve not just as a legal blueprint, but as the single protective legal soul humanity requires to navigate the volatile 21st century.
