Tuesday, 14 November 2017

The Seasteading Institute

Can you imagine living in a floating city, in a country where laws are appointed by the owners of the city, which are their own citizens and investors?
Well, this is a libertarian dream, a dream of self-determination that can be real in some years. This is why, I want you to present the Seasteading Institute.

The Seasteading Institute empowers people to build floating startup societies with innovative governance models. Supported entirely by donations from individuals who share our vision, we’ve accomplished a lot.
In 2017, Seasteading Institute secured an agreement and cultivated a special relationship with French Polynesia to co-create a seazone with “a special government framework” for floating islands in the protected waters of a Tahitian lagoon.

Simultaneously, they announced Blue Frontiers, a startup company that will administer the seazone and build floating islands designed to adapt organically to sea level change, by 2020.
Seasteading will begin around 2020 instead of 2050, because we transformed seasteading from a fringe idea to an earnest topic of conversation in leading publications around the globe.
We inspire and lead a global network of experts in every field necessary to build floating societies– including law, business, engineering, architecture, science, and art. Sign up for our newsletter so we can keep you informed of accelerating developments.

SEASTEADING TERM

At least two people independently began using the term: Neumeyer Ken in his book Sailing the Farm (1981) and Wayne Gramlich in his article "Seasteading - Homesteading on the High Seas" (1998).

The majority of proposed seasteads are modified cruise ships, retrofitted marine platforms and tailor-made floating islands, while some of the proposed management systems are related to city-state.2 Up to now, a high-level status has not been created. sea that has been recognized as a sovereign nation, although the Principality of Sealand is a disputed micronation constituted on an abandoned marine platform near Suffolk, England. The closest thing to a seastead that has been built so far are large ships of high seas that are sometimes called "floating cities" and small floating islands.

LEGAL ASPECTS

Outside of the Exclusive Economic Zone of 200 nautical miles (370 km), which countries can claim in accordance with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, on the high seas is not subject to the laws of sovereign nation whatsoever it is not the flag under which a ship sails (see international waters). Some examples of organizations that use this possibility are Women on Waves, which allows abortions to women in countries where abortions are subject to strict laws, and pirate radio stations navigating the North Sea during the 1960s (such as Radio Caroline). Like these organizations, a seastead may be able to take advantage of the more flexible laws and regulations that exist outside the sovereignty of nations, and to have a great deal of self-government.

FOUNDERS

The Seasteading Institute, founded by Wayne Gramlich and Patri Friedman on April 15, 2008, is an organization formed to facilitate the establishment of floating autonomous communities on maritime platforms operating in international waters. Gramlich's 1998 article "SeaSteading - Homesteading on the high seas ", describes the concept of affordable steading, and attracted Friedman's attention with his small-scale project proposal.6 The two began to work together and recorded their first online collaborative" book "in 2001 , which explores aspects of seasteading, from waste disposal to flags of convenience.

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