Interoperability Protocols for Plural Systems

Plural governance requires shared protocols that allow diversity without fragmentation.

Plural systems cannot function without shared protocols. Interoperability is the foundation that lets different governance models coexist without collapse.

What Interoperability Means

It means you can move between systems without losing rights, services, or legitimacy. It means data, resources, and obligations can be reconciled across governance modules.

Think of it as the API layer of society. Without it, the network fractures.

Minimum Shared Principles

Interoperability requires a baseline. This might include:

These are not the whole system; they are the compatibility layer.

Preventing Harm Across Boundaries

If one system’s policies harm others, interoperability fails. You need rules for externalities: environmental damage, labor exploitation, or resource extraction must be governed across boundaries.

How Protocols Evolve

Protocols should be minimal but upgradable. You can version them like software. Older systems remain compatible while new protocols are tested and adopted.

The Benefit

Interoperability lets you have diversity without isolation. It preserves choice while protecting shared stability. It is the glue that makes adaptive governance ecosystems possible.

Part of Adaptive Governance Ecosystems