Enlarging the individual's scope of policy-making to a global level. The effect is to assure equal distribution of all goods and services globally, and to gather, coordinate, and distribute global information.
An integral part of enabling participatory regulation by training the individual to enlarge his policy-making scope to a global level while participating at grassroots level; and by gathering, coordinating and distributing global information.
Tactics include: regulatory boards to create a world-wide system of administrative boards for collecting data and establishing accountability regarding bureaucratic policies on the local level; local standards to create structures to survey needs and develop procedures for world-wide coordination of standards; local intercommunication is intended to establish a worldwide framework for local intercommunication through coordinated reporting, data banks, and processing; administrative designs intended to create the structures for international coordination in the development of common administrative images, models, and practices on the local level; and distribution control to create worldwide structures to control effective economic distribution based on global priorities according to local need. An example is the distribution of surplus food to starving people through agencies of the United Nations or the distribution of technological skills, materials, and methodologies to underdeveloped nations.