Volume 4: Populocracy
Social and Economic Bases of Collective-Individualism

Across Africa, democracy has been rehearsed, defended, exported, and endured. Yet corruption persists, institutions decay, and the governed remain spectators to decisions that shape their lives. This volume confronts that failure without apology. It names the problem as structural, not moral; systemic, not personal. And it advances a decisive alternative: Populocracy.
Here, populocracy is articulated not as populism, not as mob-rule, and not as electoral spectacle, but as a disciplined system of shared governance — where legislative power belongs to the governed people, administrative power is exercised by commicrats, and govoxiers exist to inform, not rule. It is governance stripped of insulation, elitism, and blind trust.
Volume 4 develops the ethno-socialist foundation of populocracy, grounding it in African collectivist traditions, ethno-corporatist economics, and the lived realities of contemporary African societies. It introduces the architecture of informal advisory-bodies, the empowerment of the populous, and the abolition of bureaucratic opacity. It challenges democracy, autocracy, and democratic-socialism alike — arguing that any system denying the people direct legislative authority is unworthy of the name governance.
This volume speaks directly to Africa’s younger generation — in the Homeland and the Diaspora — who no longer seek representation, but authorship of their future. It frames populocracy as the only viable path toward social justice, economic dignity, institutional accountability, and the long-deferred vision of a United African States.
Volume 4 closes at the threshold of constitutional reality. Volume 5 opens the door. This is not theory for debate. It is governance for those ready to govern themselves.
Published: February 15, 2023
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The House-of-StateLords: Assembly, Court, and Tribunal in an Ethnopublican State












