Tuesday, 12 May 2026

The Borders We Share: Utopia’s Banks, Indus’ Bend (Post 45)

 

The Borders We Share: A New Way to Fix a Broken World

The water flows clear and steady, carrying the dreams of two worlds.

One is Utopia’s Banks, the orderly rivers that wind through Thomas More’s perfect island society — channels of reason where every stream serves the common good, every bank is shared, and no private greed diverts the flow. The other is the Indus River, the ancient lifeblood of the Indian subcontinent, rising in the snows of the Himalayas and carving its way through India and Pakistan — a river that has nourished civilizations for five thousand years, yet today is strained by upstream dams, downstream needs, and the enduring scars of Partition.

I arrive with the companions who have crossed every fractured frontier of this series: Sherlock Holmes, deerstalker traded for a wide-brimmed hat against the sun on the water; Dr. John Watson, notebook curling at the edges from the humidity; King Arthur, who has swapped mail for a plain traveller’s cloak but still carries Excalibur at his side like a vow that no river can be owned by one alone.

With us walk the people who belong to these waters.

From Utopia’s Banks come Governor Ademus, elected for wisdom yet bound by the island’s rigid laws; a young Utopian farmer whose fields depend on the river’s steady flow; a former bondman now freed who tends the communal banks; and a dissident scholar who questions whether perfection can ever truly share its waters.

From the Indus come a Pakistani farmer from Sindh whose fields wither when upstream flows are restricted; an Indian engineer from the upper reaches who defends his nation’s right to develop its own resources; a Sindhi activist fighting for downstream rights; and a Kashmiri elder who remembers when the river flowed freely across a once-united land.

This is Post 45, the third stride in Section 8: Rivers and Flows. We have left Laputa’s falls and the Mekong. Now the series follows water through ideals and realities, where sovereignty is measured not in cubic metres alone but in the trust between upstream and downstream, and the question of whether a perfect system can ever truly share its flow.

Utopia’s Banks are the clear, orderly rivers that wind through Thomas More’s perfect island society. Every stream serves the common good, every bank is shared, and no private greed diverts the flow. The water is managed with mathematical precision — canals, locks, and communal irrigation ensure fairness. The river is a model of reason: steady, predictable, and allocated according to need. The banks are lined with neat orchards and communal fields where citizens work in rotation, their labour contributing to the collective bounty. Yet beneath the surface lies a quiet tension. The island’s rigid laws leave little room for the unexpected. When droughts come or upstream needs change, the perfect system struggles to adapt. The farmers and former bondmen who tend the banks have no real voice in the decisions made in the Senate. They live by the river’s grace, yet the grace feels increasingly conditional, as though perfection itself has become a cage that limits the very flow it claims to protect.

The water in Utopia is meant to be eternal and equitable, yet the rigid schedules sometimes leave lower fields parched while upper canals overflow. The dissident scholar walks the banks at dusk, wondering aloud whether a system that eliminates all private desire can ever truly understand the living needs of those who depend on the current. The former bondman, hands still calloused from years of service, tends the communal sluices and whispers that even perfect laws can leave some thirsty if they forget the human hands that guide the water.

The Indus is brutally real. It rises in the snows of the Himalayas and flows through India and Pakistan, sustaining over 200 million people. Since Partition in 1947, the river has been governed by the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty, which allocates the eastern rivers to India and the western rivers primarily to Pakistan. Yet upstream dams in India, climate change, and population growth have strained the agreement. Downstream Pakistan faces reduced flows, salinity intrusion in the Delta, and declining agricultural yields. Both nations claim historical and legal rights; both accuse the other of violating the spirit of the treaty. The river that once united the land now divides it, its waters carrying both life and the memory of division.

The Pakistani farmer from Sindh stands on cracked fields and watches the river arrive thinner each season. The Indian engineer measures releases from upstream dams with pride in national development, yet knows the tension it creates downstream. The Sindhi activist documents the human cost — villages where women walk kilometres for water, children whose futures shrink with every dry season. The Kashmiri elder remembers a time when the river flowed freely across a land not yet split by borders. The Indus does not forget. It carries the weight of history in every drop, the memory of unity and the pain of separation.

Sovereignty Conflicts frames both as classic triadic disputes: two privileged claimants exercising sovereignty over a populated third territory whose constitutive population is treated as peripheral to the claim yet suffers the direct environmental and economic cost.

Territorial Disputes adds the sociological fracture: in Utopia the Senate’s perfect order versus the lived needs of those by the banks; on the Indus upstream development versus downstream survival.

Cosmopolitanism and State Sovereignty asks the moral question: can a claim to water be legitimate if it systematically deprives those downstream who have depended on it for generations?

Territorial Disputes in the Americas provides the practical precedent: guarantor-led shared-resource zones that have achieved high durability in Latin American cases — models now urgently needed here for a river that knows no single owner.

Holmes refuses to stay on the bank. He spends four days walking Utopia’s Banks with the farmers and former bondmen, measuring flow rates, noting seasonal changes, and timing the rigid schedules of the Senate’s irrigation decrees. He spends the next four days travelling the Indus with engineers, farmers, and activists, timing dam releases and the arrival of reduced flows in Sindh. The data he returns with are starkly symmetrical.

In Utopia’s Banks, dry-season flow has dropped by 21 % due to rigid upstream management; 1,300 farming families face uncertainty and failing crops. On the Indus, downstream flow has decreased by 18–24 % during critical periods; millions in Pakistan face declining yields, drinking water shortages, and increasing salinity. In Utopia, zero Senators have consulted the riverside communities about the banks’ health. On the Indus, high-level negotiations rarely include the farmers most affected by the decisions made far upstream.

Watson’s notebook grows heavy: “Both waters are being managed by powers that rarely stand in the current. The difference is only in the signature — perfect decree or treaty clause.”

Arthur stands on Utopia’s Banks watching the orderly flow, then stands on the Indus bank watching a distant dam release. He says only: “A river does not care who claims it. It only remembers who cared for its banks and who let it run free.”

We meet where the two waters almost touch: a neutral bank on Utopia’s lowest terrace, lowered to within 100 metres of the Indus for the first time in history, with representatives from both nations brought by boat and helicopter

.Present: Governor Ademus, seated on a simple bench of polished stone, visibly uncomfortable at being so close to untamed water; the young Utopian farmer; the former bondman; the Pakistani farmer from Sindh; the Indian engineer; the Sindhi activist; Hamed al-Ghabri, the Omani elder whose water-bag has become a symbol of cross-border memory.

The young Utopian farmer speaks first: “The water is flowing. It does not ask permission. It only asks to be shared.”

The Pakistani farmer answers, voice heavy with exhaustion: “Our fields are cracking under the sun. The river that once fed us now arrives late and thin. We ask only for the right to the steady flow our ancestors knew, the flow that once made the desert bloom.”

The Indian engineer, voice measured but firm: “Development is our right. The dams bring electricity to millions and control floods that once destroyed lives. Downstream nations must understand that progress upstream benefits the whole basin.”

Arthur lays Excalibur flat across a smooth stone by the water’s edge. Every hand — governor, farmer, engineer, activist — rests on the scabbard at once.

I open Sovereignty Conflicts:

“Egalitarian shared sovereignty does not ask who owns the water. It asks how we keep the river from running dry beneath the dams and claims that divide us.”The Sindhi activist, voice rising with passion: “The Indus is our mother. When she weakens, our children hunger and our villages turn to dust. Upstream dams cannot ignore downstream life. We have waited long enough for fairness.”

The former bondman, voice steady and grounded: “In Utopia we learned that perfect laws can still leave some thirsty. The river does not care for perfection written on paper. It cares for fairness felt in the soil and in the hands that work it.”

Governor Ademus, after a long silence, his face thoughtful: “Our system was built for equality. Yet equality that ignores the needs of those downstream is no equality at all. We must find a way to let the water serve all, not just the vision of the few.”

The Indian engineer, nodding slowly: “If we share the data, the releases, the benefits — perhaps the river can feed us all without starving any. Progress need not come at the cost of our neighbours.”
The young Utopian farmer, eyes bright with hope: “Then let us make a new law of the banks — one where the strong protect the weak, and the river runs for all. No one takes more than they need, and everyone gives back what they can to keep the current strong.”

Arthur’s voice, quiet as a vow yet carrying across the water: “A sword laid flat is not surrender. It is invitation. Let every hand rest here, and let the river judge what is just.”

The “River Accord” is drafted in water and ink:

  • Joint Utopia–Indus River Commission with binding flow-release schedules and real-time data sharing; surplus benefits fund cross-border infrastructure and drought resilience.
  • Utopia’s Banks and the Indus declared shared ecological corridors; 35 % of any future resource revenue funds permanent descent corridors and community-led water projects.
  • “Water-to-Sky Residency Pathway”: ten continuous years of contribution (farming, stewardship) = permanent residency rights or citizenship on grounded rings.
  • Higher Court seated alternately in Islamabad/Delhi and on Utopia’s riverbank, with judges from Indian, Pakistani, Utopian, and local communities; veto power on any project that reduces downstream flow below agreed levels.
  • Every new dam or crystal operation must display, in Urdu, Hindi, English, and Utopian dialect, the flow data and the names of the communities and workers who sustain the river.

Governor Ademus signs first, his hand steady because it rests near running water. The Pakistani farmer signs second. The Indian engineer signs third. The Sindhi activist signs fourth. The young Utopian farmer signs last — his calloused hand pressing the parchment into the wet bank as seal.

The wind still carries warnings: dams will hold back, rivers will run thin, people will thirst. Yet it also carries new notes: the steady rush of regulated flow reaching downstream fields, the laughter of Indian and Pakistani children learning river stewardship together on a neutral bank, the quiet splash of a Utopian scholar choosing to wade rather than float, the sound of a water-bag being refilled from a stream that no longer runs dry.

Peace along this vertical-and-horizontal frontier is not a treaty signed in glass towers. It is a drop of water left to flow freely so a field may grow, a path reopened so a farmer may tend his crops, a river whose song is wide enough for every engineer and every herder to drink beneath the same sky.

You have stood by a river and felt its current pull at your feet.
You have watched water flow past a border and wondered why one side drinks while the other thirsts.

You have, perhaps, never met the farmer whose fields dried because a dam held back the flow, the engineer who balanced progress with equity, or the scholar who learned that the stars are beautiful but the water is home.

The Borders We Share asks only one thing: the next time you look at a river, remember there is always a current — and that the current remembers every bank, every promise kept or broken.

Next Tuesday we follow the water further — new tides, new dances.

I remain, as always,

Dr. Jorge

Sovereignty Conflicts (2017).

Territorial Disputes (2020).

Cosmopolitanism and State Sovereignty (2023). 

Territorial Disputes in the Americas (2025).

New posts every Tuesday.

Post 44: Laputa’s Falls, Mekong’s Rush: Sky to Stream


Section 8: Rivers and Flows (Posts 43–48)

46, Ruritania’s Tide, Danube’s Dance: Crowns of Current

47, Narnia’s Run, Euphrates’ End: Royal Rivers

48, Cimmeria’s Flood, Amur’s Edge: Dust Washes East

State Sovereignty: Concept and Conceptions (OPEN ACCESS) (IJSL 2024)

AMAZON

ROUTLEDGE, TAYLOR & FRANCIS

Tuesday 12th May 2026

Dr Jorge Emilio Núñez

X (formerly, Twitter): https://x.com/DrJorge_World

https://drjorge.world

Tuesday, 5 May 2026

The Borders We Share: Laputa’s Falls, Mekong’s Rush (Post 44)

 

The Borders We Share: A New Way to Fix a Broken World

The water falls from two worlds at once.

One is Laputa’s Falls, the cascading streams that pour from the edges of the floating island like silver threads woven from cloud and crystal, tumbling thousands of metres before they dissolve into mist or strike the earth below. The other is the mighty Mekong, the “Mother of Waters,” flowing 4,350 kilometres from the Tibetan Plateau through China, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam—a lifeline for 60 million people that has nourished rice fields, fisheries, and civilizations for millennia, yet is now reshaped by upstream dams and downstream thirst.

Both waters fall from heights.

Both are contested.

Both carry life and memory in their current.

Both are claimed by powers that rarely stand in the spray.

I arrive with the companions who have crossed every fractured frontier of this series: Sherlock Holmes, deerstalker traded for a wide-brimmed hat against the blinding glare; Dr. John Watson, notebook curling at the edges from the spray; King Arthur, who has swapped mail for a plain traveller’s cloak but still carries Excalibur at his side like a vow that no river can be owned by one alone.

With us walk the people who belong to these waters.

From Laputa’s Falls come the cloud-weavers who tend the crystal reservoirs; the mist-dwellers who live on the island’s lower ledges where the falls begin; a young Laputan engineer who warns that the island’s levitation is destabilizing the flow; and an exiled scholar who says the water has begun to sing in two voices since the magnetic drift intensified.

From the Mekong come a Lao fisherwoman from the Golden Triangle whose nets have grown lighter each season; a Vietnamese rice farmer from the Delta whose fields shrink with saline intrusion; a Cambodian activist fighting upstream dam impacts on Tonlé Sap; and a Chinese engineer from the upper reaches who defends the right of his nation to develop its own resources.This is Post 44, the second stride in Section 8: Rivers and Flows. We have left Sherwood’s stream and the Nile. Now the series follows water as it falls from sky to stream, where sovereignty is measured not in cubic metres alone but in the rhythm of seasons, the health of fisheries, and the question of who controls the source when the river belongs to many nations.

Laputa’s Falls are the cascading streams that pour from the edges of the floating island. Crystal reservoirs feed them, and the island’s magnetic field shapes their descent—sometimes gentle veils of mist, sometimes roaring torrents. In recent years the falls have grown erratic. The island’s levitation destabilizes the flow, sending unpredictable surges downward that flood Balnibarbi or leave lower settlements parched. The cloud-weavers and mist-dwellers who live near the falls have no voice in the decisions made in the upper academy. They are not citizens of the heights; they are the ones who catch what falls.

The water that once nourished the island’s lower ledges now carries uncertainty. Every surge erodes the fragile balance; every dry spell leaves the mist-dwellers thirsty. The scholars above measure the crystals that keep the island aloft, but rarely ask what happens when the water reaches the ground.

The Mekong is brutally real. It begins on the Tibetan Plateau in China and flows through six countries, supporting 60 million people and one of the world’s most productive inland fisheries. China’s cascade of dams on the upper Mekong has altered the river’s natural flood pulse, reducing sediment that once fertilized the Delta and disrupting fish migration. Downstream nations—especially Vietnam and Cambodia—face saline intrusion in the Delta, shrinking Tonlé Sap, and declining rice yields. Laos builds its own dams for export revenue. Thailand balances irrigation and energy needs. The 1995 Mekong River Commission exists, but binding agreements remain elusive. The river that once brought life in predictable cycles now brings uncertainty to millions who depend on its rhythm.

Both waters fall from heights; both are contested by powers that rarely stand in the spray.

Sovereignty Conflicts frames both as classic triadic disputes: two privileged claimants exercising sovereignty over a populated third territory whose constitutive population is treated as peripheral to the claim yet suffers the direct environmental and economic cost.

Territorial Disputes adds the sociological fracture: upper-island controllers versus lower mist-dwellers; upstream dam builders versus downstream communities.
Cosmopolitanism and State Sovereignty asks the moral question: can a claim to water be legitimate if it systematically deprives those downstream who have depended on it for generations?

Territorial Disputes in the Americas provides the practical precedent: guarantor-led shared-resource zones that have achieved high durability in Latin American cases—models now urgently needed here for a river that knows no single owner.

Holmes refuses to stay dry. He spends four days climbing Laputa’s lower ledges with the mist-dwellers, measuring flow volumes, noting surge patterns, and timing the influence of the island’s magnetic pulses on the falls. He spends the next four days travelling the Mekong with fishers, farmers, and engineers, timing dam releases and the arrival of reduced flows in the Delta. The data he returns with are starkly symmetrical.

In Laputa’s Falls, seasonal surges have increased by 22 % while dry-season flow has dropped by 19 %; 2,100 mist-dwellers face unpredictable flooding and drought. On the Mekong, upstream dam operations have reduced dry-season flow by 20–25 % in the Delta; millions in Vietnam and Cambodia face declining fisheries and saline intrusion. In Laputa, zero upper-city scholars have consulted the mist-dwellers about the falls’ health. On the Mekong, high-level dam operators rarely visit the downstream communities most affected.

Watson’s notebook grows heavy: “Both waters are being controlled by powers that rarely stand in the spray. The difference is only in the signature—royal decree or dam contract.”

Arthur stands beneath Laputa’s Falls feeling the mist on his face, then stands on the banks of the Mekong watching a distant dam release. He says only: “A river does not care who claims it. It only remembers who cared for its banks and who let it run free.”

We meet where the two waters almost touch: a neutral ledge on Laputa’s lowest terrace, lowered to within 100 metres of the Mekong’s surface for the first time in history, with representatives from the river nations brought by boat and helicopter.

Present: King Laputian, seated on a portable throne of adamant, visibly uncomfortable at being so close to falling water; Balnibarbi, barefoot on wet stone, eyes shining; the young Laputan engineer; the Lao fisherwoman; the Vietnamese rice farmer; the Cambodian activist; Hamed al-Ghabri, the Omani elder whose water-bag has become a symbol of cross-border memory.

The Lao fisherwoman speaks first, voice steady as the current: “The water is falling. It does not ask permission. It only asks to be shared.”
The Vietnamese rice farmer answers: “Our Delta is dying. Saline water creeps inland, our fields shrink, our fish disappear. We ask only for the right to the steady flow our ancestors knew.”

The Chinese engineer (representing upstream interests), voice measured: “Development is our right. The dams bring electricity and control floods. Downstream nations must understand that progress upstream benefits the whole basin.”

Arthur lays Excalibur flat across a wet stone ledge. Every hand—royal, engineer, farmer, activist—rests on the scabbard at once.

I open Sovereignty Conflicts:

“Egalitarian shared sovereignty does not ask who owns the water. It asks how we keep the river from running dry beneath the dams and claims that divide us.”

The Cambodian activist, voice rising: “Tonlé Sap is the heart of our country. When the pulse weakens, our fisheries collapse and our people hunger. Upstream dams cannot ignore downstream life.”Balnibarbi, gentle but firm: “Our falls were never meant to be weapons. The water falls to nourish, not to punish. Let us measure not power but equity.”

The young Laputan engineer: “The island’s levitation destabilizes everything below. If we do not share the data and coordinate releases, both our worlds will suffer.”

King Laputian, voice thoughtful: “Our crystals keep us aloft, but we have forgotten how to share the waters below. Perhaps the river will teach us.”

The Lao fisherwoman, quiet but resolute: “Teach us? No. Let us teach you. The river does not need teaching. It needs releasing. It needs flowing. It needs remembering.”

Arthur’s voice, quiet as a vow: “A sword laid flat is not surrender. It is invitation. Let every hand rest here, and let the water judge.”

The “River Accord” is drafted in spray and ink:

Joint Laputa–Mekong River Commission with binding flow-release schedules and real-time data sharing; surplus benefits fund cross-border infrastructure and drought resilience.

Laputa’s Falls and the Mekong declared shared ecological corridors; 35 % of any future crystal or hydropower revenue funds permanent descent corridors and community-led water projects.

“Water-to-Sky Residency Pathway”: ten continuous years of contribution (fishing, farming, stewardship) = permanent residency rights or citizenship on grounded rings.

Higher Court seated alternately in Vientiane and on Laputa’s lowest terrace, with judges from China, downstream nations, Laputan, and local communities; veto power on any project that reduces downstream flow below agreed levels.

Every new dam or crystal operation must display, in Chinese, Vietnamese, Khmer, Lao, and Laputan dialect, the flow data and the names of the communities and workers who sustain the river.

King Laputian signs first, his hand steady because it rests near falling water. The Vietnamese rice farmer signs second. The Cambodian activist signs third. The Lao fisherwoman signs fourth. Balnibarbi signs last—his bare foot pressing the parchment into the wet stone as seal.

The wind still carries warnings: dams will hold back, falls will surge, people will thirst. Yet it also carries new notes: the steady rush of regulated flow reaching downstream fields, the laughter of Lao and Vietnamese children learning river stewardship together on a neutral bank, the quiet splash of a Laputan scholar choosing to wade rather than float, the sound of a water-bag being refilled from a stream that no longer runs dry.

Peace along this vertical-and-horizontal frontier is not a treaty signed in glass towers. It is a drop of water left to flow freely so a field may grow, a path reopened so a fisher may cast her net, a river whose song is wide enough for every farmer and every outlaw to drink beneath the same sky.

You have stood by a waterfall and felt the mist on your face.
You have watched a great river flow past a border and wondered why one side drinks while the other thirsts.

You have, perhaps, never met the farmer whose fields dried because a dam held back the flow, the fisher whose nets grew lighter, or the scholar who learned that the stars are beautiful but the water is home.

The Borders We Share asks only one thing: the next time you look at a river, remember there is always a current—and that the current remembers every bank, every promise kept or broken.

Next Tuesday we follow the water further—new banks, new bends.

I remain, as always,

Dr. Jorge

• Sovereignty Conflicts (2017).

• Territorial Disputes (2020).

• Cosmopolitanism and State Sovereignty (2023). 

• Territorial Disputes in the Americas (2025).

New posts every Tuesday.

Post 43: Sherwood’s Stream, Nile’s Flow: Green to Blue


Section 8: Rivers and Flows (Posts 43–48)

45, Utopia’s Banks, Indus’ Bend: Perfect Waters

46, Ruritania’s Tide, Danube’s Dance: Crowns of Current

47, Narnia’s Run, Euphrates’ End: Royal Rivers

48, Cimmeria’s Flood, Amur’s Edge: Dust Washes East

State Sovereignty: Concept and Conceptions (OPEN ACCESS) (IJSL 2024)

AMAZON

ROUTLEDGE, TAYLOR & FRANCIS

Tuesday 5th May 2026

Dr Jorge Emilio Núñez

X (formerly, Twitter): https://x.com/DrJorge_World

https://drjorge.world

Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Juris North: Sovereign Selves, Sovereign Peoples, Sovereign States: Black Self-Determination Reconsidered

 

Juris North 2026/27 Event

Following successful roundtable events including our global response to crises in 2020, the work of Hans Kelsen in 2021 and 2022, contemporary non/anti-positivist legal theory in 2023 and queer theory, leadership and inclusion in 2024/2025, we are pleased to invite expressions of interest in a forthcoming event, “Sovereign Selves, Sovereign Peoples, Sovereign States: Black Self-Determination Reconsidered.”

This event seeks to bring together scholars, practitioners, policymakers and organisers to rethink the meaning and scope of sovereignty in relation to Black self-determination—moving beyond the state to consider the sovereignty of individuals, communities and overlapping political formations. Spanning themes such as territorial rights, political legitimacy, diaspora, economic autonomy, and shared or layered sovereignty, the event aims to foster interdisciplinary and globally grounded conversations about Black political futures.

At this stage, we are gauging interest and warmly invite those who may wish to contribute, collaborate, or participate to get in touch. Based on the level of interest, we anticipate issuing a formal call for abstracts and developing the event further.

  • To critically rethink sovereignty across scales—from the individual to the community to the state—and assess how these frameworks illuminate or constrain Black self-determination in contemporary and historical contexts.
  • To bring diverse perspectives into dialogue, including scholars, practitioners, policymakers and organisers, in order to explore how different experiences, disciplines, and geographies shape understandings of Black political agency and autonomy.
  • To foster collaboration and future-oriented exchange by identifying shared questions, emerging frameworks (such as overlapping or layered sovereignty) and opportunities for joint research, practice and knowledge production.

Dr Jorge E. Núñez, Manchester Law School

Open to all. Ideally, multi-disciplinary, transversal and inclusive (academics, policymakers, people at large from different states, religions, genders, ethnicities, etc.).

1. Black Self-Determination and Territorial Rights

  • Claims to land, autonomy, and political authority in Black communities
  • Historical and contemporary cases (e.g. Liberia, Haiti, Maroon societies)
  • Territorial sovereignty and its limits
  • Non-territorial or shared sovereignty models

2. Black Lives Matter and Political Legitimacy

  • BLM and struggles for recognition and justice
  • State legitimacy and the use of force
  • Protest, resistance, and political authority
  • Comparative global movements

3. Colonialism, Neo-Colonialism and the Global Order

  • Colonial legacies and borders
  • Resource extraction and global inequality
  • Reparations and historical justice
  • International law and racial hierarchy

4. Identity, Nationhood and Diaspora

  • Defining “a people” in self-determination
  • Pan-Africanism and diasporic identity
  • Cultural belonging and exclusion
  • Transnational solidarity

5. Policing, Violence and the Right to Security

  • State violence and racialised policing
  • Surveillance and control
  • Abolitionist and community-based alternatives
  • Human rights frameworks

6. Economic Self-Determination and Structural Inequality

  • Land, housing, and economic autonomy
  • Racial capitalism
  • Cooperative and alternative economic models
  • Global political economy and development

7. Cultural, Epistemic and Educational Self-Determination

  • Decolonising knowledge and institutions
  • Black intellectual traditions
  • Representation and narrative power
  • Education and liberation

8. Law, Justice and Institutional Reform

  • Law as a site of racial hierarchy
  • Constitutional and institutional design
  • Transitional justice
  • Limits and possibilities of international law

9. Migration, Borders and Mobility

  • Racialised border regimes
  • Citizenship and statelessness
  • Mobility and constraints on autonomy
  • Diasporic political participation

10. Environmental Justice and Land Stewardship

  • Environmental racism
  • Climate displacement
  • Indigenous African ecological perspectives
  • Resource sovereignty and sustainability

11. Shared Sovereignty, Overlapping Claims and Black Political Futures

  • Layered and shared sovereignty models
  • Governance beyond the nation-state
  • Resolving competing political claims
  • Future-oriented frameworks for justice and stability

If you are interested in contributing to or collaborating on this event, we warmly invite you to submit an expression of interest by email to j.nunez@mmu.ac.uk by Friday 31 July 2026. At this stage, please indicate the theme(s) you are most interested in and the capacity in which you would like to be involved (e.g. presenting, organising, or other forms of collaboration).

Wednesday 22nd April 2026

Dr Jorge Emilio Núñez

X (formerly, Twitter): https://x.com/DrJorge_World

https://drjorge.world

Tuesday, 21 April 2026

The Borders We Share: Sherwood’s Stream, Nile’s Flow (Post 43)

 

The Borders We Share: A New Way to Fix a Broken World

The water sings a song older than borders. Two rivers flow through two worlds, their currents carrying both life and memory. One is Sherwood’s Stream, the clear, swift river that winds through the green heart of Robin Hood’s forest—a living artery that feeds the ancient oaks, quenches the outlaws’ thirst, and carries whispers of justice from the heart of the wood to the wider world. The other is the mighty Nile, the longest river on earth, whose waters have sustained civilizations for millennia. From the Ethiopian highlands through Sudan and into Egypt, the Nile is the green lifeline that turns desert into farmland, yet today its flow is contested between upstream Ethiopia (with the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam) and downstream Egypt, which sees the river as its existential artery. Sudan stands in the middle, caught between the two.

Both waters are vital.

Both are contested.

Both are places where “green to blue” means the difference between life and thirst.

Both are claimed by powers that rarely drink from the same cup.

I arrive with the companions who have crossed every fractured frontier of this series: Sherlock Holmes, deerstalker traded for a wide-brimmed hat against the sun; Dr. John Watson, notebook already filling with flow rates and treaty clauses; King Arthur, who has swapped mail for a simple traveller’s cloak but still carries Excalibur at his side like a vow that no river can be owned by one alone.

With us walk the people who actually belong to these waters.

From Sherwood’s Stream come Robin Hood himself, bow at his side, eyes sharp with outlaw wisdom; Little John, sturdy and loyal; Maid Marian, voice clear as the stream; and a young forester who says the water has begun to speak in two tongues since Laputa’s shadow fell across the forest.

From the Nile come an Ethiopian farmer from the Blue Nile highlands whose fields depend on the dam’s regulated flow; an Egyptian engineer from Cairo who measures the river’s level daily; a Sudanese herder from the Nile Valley who remembers when the floods were predictable and the harvests abundant; and a young activist from Khartoum who has been documenting the human cost of upstream dams and downstream shortages.

This is Post 43, the first stride in Section 8: Rivers and Flows. We have left the arid plains and deserts of Section 7. Now the series follows the water—life’s most intimate border—where sovereignty is measured not in square kilometres but in cubic metres of flow, the rhythm of floods, and the question of who drinks first when the river runs low.

Sherwood’s Stream is the clear, swift river that winds through the green heart of Robin Hood’s forest. It feeds the ancient oaks, quenches the outlaws’ thirst, and carries whispers of justice from the heart of the wood to the wider world. In recent years Laputa’s magnetic drift has begun to influence the stream’s flow, stretching its course unnaturally and altering seasonal patterns. The water still runs pure, but the balance is delicate—too much pull from above, and the stream runs thin; too little care from below, and the forest suffers.

The Nile is brutally real. It is the longest river on earth, flowing more than 6,650 kilometres from the Ethiopian highlands through Sudan and into Egypt. For Egypt, the Nile is existential—97 % of its freshwater comes from the river. Ethiopia’s Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), completed in stages and now fully operational, has altered the flow, raising fears in downstream nations of reduced water during dry seasons. Sudan, in the middle, faces both benefits (regulated flow for irrigation) and risks (flooding and sediment loss). The 1959 Nile Waters Agreement between Egypt and Sudan is increasingly strained, and new negotiations remain deadlocked. Both rivers are vital; both are contested by powers that rarely drink from the same cup.

Sovereignty Conflicts (2017) frames both as classic triadic disputes: two privileged claimants exercising sovereignty over a populated third territory whose constitutive population is treated as peripheral to the claim yet suffers the direct environmental and economic cost.

Territorial Disputes (2020) adds the sociological fracture: upstream developers versus downstream dependents.

Cosmopolitanism and State Sovereignty (2023) asks the moral question: can a claim to water be legitimate if it systematically deprives those downstream who have depended on it for millennia?

Territorial Disputes in the Americas (2025) provides the practical precedent: guarantor-led shared-resource zones that have achieved high durability in Latin American cases—models now urgently needed here for a river that knows no borders.

Holmes refuses to stay on the bank. He spends four days walking Sherwood’s Stream with Robin and the outlaws, measuring flow rates, noting seasonal changes, and timing the influence of Laputa’s magnetic pull on the current. He spends the next four days travelling the Nile with engineers, herders, and activists, timing water releases from the GERD and the arrival of reduced flows in Egypt. The data he returns with are starkly symmetrical.

In Sherwood’s Stream, seasonal flow has decreased by 18 % in dry months due to Laputa’s influence; 1,200 forest families face water shortages. On the Nile, downstream flow has decreased by 15–20 % during critical irrigation periods since the GERD reached full capacity; millions in Egypt and Sudan face reduced agricultural yields and drinking water concerns. In Sherwood, no scholar from above has consulted the outlaws about the stream’s health. On the Nile, high-level negotiations rarely include the farmers and herders who depend on it daily.

Watson’s notebook grows heavy: “Both rivers are being claimed by powers that rarely drink from them. The difference is only in the signature—royal decree or dam contract.”

Arthur stands on the bank of Sherwood’s Stream watching Laputa drift overhead, then stands on the Nile bank watching a distant dam release. He says only: “A river does not care who claims it. It only remembers who cared for its banks and who let it run free.”

We meet where the two rivers almost touch: a neutral point on Sherwood’s Stream, with Laputa’s lowest terrace lowered to bring the waters close, and representatives from the Nile brought by boat and helicopter.

Present: King Laputian, seated on a portable throne of adamant, visibly uncomfortable at being so close to running water; Robin Hood, bow at his side; Little John and Maid Marian; an Ethiopian farmer; an Egyptian engineer; a Sudanese herder; Hamed al-Ghabri, the Omani elder whose water-bag has become a symbol of cross-border memory.

Robin Hood speaks first, voice clear as the stream: “The water is moving. It does not ask permission. It only asks to be shared.”
The Ethiopian farmer answers: “Our dam brings light and irrigation to our highlands, but downstream the river runs thin. We ask only for the right to develop our own future without starving our brothers below.”
The Egyptian engineer, voice measured: “The Nile is our lifeblood. Without steady flow, our fields turn to dust and our cities thirst. We have built civilization on this river for thousands of years. We cannot let it be controlled by one upstream power.”

Arthur lays Excalibur flat across a smooth stone by the water’s edge. Every hand—royal, outlaw, farmer, engineer—rests on the scabbard at once.

I open: “Egalitarian shared sovereignty does not ask who owns the water. It asks how we keep the river from running dry beneath the dams and claims that divide us.”

The Sudanese herder, voice steady: “We stand in the middle. When the dam holds back, our fields flood or starve. When it releases, downstream suffers. The river knows no flags. It only knows balance.”

Maid Marian, voice firm: “In Sherwood we learned that the forest belongs to all who live in it. The stream does not belong to the king in his castle or the sheriff in his tower. It belongs to those who drink from it and care for its banks.”

The Egyptian engineer, after a pause: “We have ancient rights. The Nile has fed us since the time of the Pharaohs. Yet we understand that upstream development is reality. We need a new agreement that honors history and future needs.”

Robin Hood, smiling slightly: “Then let us make a new law of the greenwood—one where the strong protect the weak, and the river runs for all. No one takes more than they need, and everyone gives back what they can.”

King Laputian, voice thoughtful: “Our crystals keep us aloft, but we have forgotten how to share the waters below. Perhaps the river will teach us.”The Ethiopian farmer nods: “If we share the data, the releases, the benefits—perhaps the Nile can feed us all without drowning any.”

Arthur’s voice, quiet as a vow: “A sword laid flat is not surrender. It is invitation. Let every hand rest here, and let the river judge.”

The “River Accord” is drafted in water and ink:

Joint Sherwood–Nile River Commission with binding flow-release schedules and data sharing; surplus benefits fund cross-border infrastructure and drought resilience.

Sherwood’s Stream and the Nile declared shared ecological corridors; 30 % of any future revenue from dams or forest resources funds permanent descent corridors and community-led water projects.
“Water-to-Sky Residency Pathway”: ten continuous years of contribution (farming, stewardship, scholarship) = permanent residency rights or citizenship on grounded rings.

Higher Court seated alternately in Addis Ababa/Cairo and on Sherwood’s riverbank, with judges from Ethiopian, Egyptian, Sudanese, and forest communities; veto power on any project that reduces downstream flow below agreed levels.

Every new dam or extraction operation must display, in Amharic, Arabic, English, and forest dialect, the flow data and the names of the communities and workers who sustain the river.

King Laputian signs first, his hand steady because it rests near running water. Robin Hood signs second. The Ethiopian farmer signs third. The Egyptian engineer signs fourth. The Sudanese herder signs last—his staff pressing the parchment into the wet sand as seal.

The wind still carries warnings: dams will hold back, rivers will run thin, people will thirst. Yet it also carries new notes: the soft rush of regulated flow reaching downstream fields, the laughter of Ethiopian and Egyptian children learning river stewardship together on a neutral bank, the quiet splash of a Laputan scholar choosing to wade rather than float, the sound of a water-bag being refilled from a stream that no longer runs dry.

Peace along this vertical-and-horizontal frontier is not a treaty signed in glass towers. It is a drop of water left to flow freely so a field may grow, a path reopened so a herder may follow the river, a current whose song is wide enough for every farmer and every outlaw to drink beneath the same sky.

You have stood by a river and felt its current pull at your feet.

You have watched water flow past a border and wondered why one side drinks while the other thirsts.

You have, perhaps, never met the farmer whose fields dried because a dam held back the flow, the herder whose cattle could no longer cross, or the outlaw who discovered that even a king can learn to share the stream.

The Borders We Share asks only one thing: the next time you look at a river, remember there is always a current—and that the current remembers every bank, every promise kept or broken.

Next Tuesday we follow the water further—new falls, new rushes.

I remain, as always,

Dr Jorge

• Sovereignty Conflicts (2017).

• Territorial Disputes (2020).

• Cosmopolitanism and State Sovereignty (2023). 

• Territorial Disputes in the Americas (2025).

New posts every Tuesday. The next post will be available on Tuesday 5th May 2026.

Bonus Post: Sands of Unity Revisited – A Multidimensional Tale of the Middle East in Early 2026

Section 8: Rivers and Flows (Posts 43–48)

44, Laputa’s Falls, Mekong’s Rush: Sky to Stream

45, Utopia’s Banks, Indus’ Bend: Perfect Waters

46, Ruritania’s Tide, Danube’s Dance: Crowns of Current

47, Narnia’s Run, Euphrates’ End: Royal Rivers

48, Cimmeria’s Flood, Amur’s Edge: Dust Washes East

State Sovereignty: Concept and Conceptions (OPEN ACCESS) (IJSL 2024)

AMAZON

ROUTLEDGE, TAYLOR & FRANCIS

Tuesday 21st April 2026

Dr Jorge Emilio Núñez

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