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Imagining the Federation governmental structure

The thing is, you're system isn't much better than the system we have today.

What are you watching ST for? It's supposed to be about a BETTER future, for all!

Only 1% of people using the internet will better mankind, by using it, but it's worth it, because it's so cheap!

There are 6 billion brains on this planet. There may be 10 billion by the 23rd Century. We progress faster if all of them are used and none are treated is non-contributive and worthless, which is the system you propose. You seem to think some are just inherently lazy, don't want to contribute.

They do. They just haven't the means, in the 21st Century. They will, by the 24th.

It make sense to have everybody having the potential to contribute. 24th Century people will realise this. And they will have COMPASSION for those who don't. And they will be so well-off that they can keep them in what seems to us to be luxury.

'The internet, information and job openings only, no entertainment.'

What if some 'tramp' comes up with an idea for the latest blockbuster film? It would putrify in his head in the 21st Century. It would be made into a film in the 24th. You seem to want to castigate people.


And, by the way, I'm a student too.
 
Cheapjack, can I ask that you not completely derail the thread I started?

There are threads-a-plenty on the topics you bring up. This wasn't really intended as that.
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So far as the representation of UFP colonies goes - the hard-edged realist among me says they probably don't get any.

The colonial governor is probably appointed by the President or the UFP Minister of Colonization until the colony becomes fairly large. This is for multiple reasons:

1. Colonies in Trek seem to start out very small - hundreds of people at most. That's too small for fair administration to come from among the colonists. And I have no doubt that a colonial governor, in the initial stages of colonial settlement, will combine executive, legislative, and judicial powers in themselves.
2. If the colony fails, hard decisions will need to be made. Whether to evacuate, to name an extreme but most immediately graspable issue, would be an incredibly emotional decision for the colonists, but one that would have to be made very calmly. Granted, by the 24th Century, the UFP probably has lowered the failure rate of colonies significantly, but it's always a risk.
3. The colonial governor, day to day, doesn't represent the colonists, but rather represents the UFP to the colonists. He's not accountable or responsible to them, but rather to the Ministry of Colonization.

When the transition happens from an appointed to elected governor probably depends on many factors. It most likely is the end of a process which begins with the constitution of the initial governmantal structure, progresses through the appointment of an advisory body to the colonists, through the election of that advisory body, through to the reconstitution of the advisory body as an elected colonial legislature, and then the slow process of powers shifting from the UFP bureaurcacy to the governor to the legislature.

Basic politics tells me it's bad juju (to put it simply) for the UFP to just hand out resources with no accountability to the resource-grantor, which is what electing the colonial administration from the start basically does.

Representation before the Federation Council probably comes only after the long process of colonial government evolution (and colonial expansion) has progressed to the point where the colony can usefully appoint an observer. Most colonies, to be honest, couldn't. The colonist picked almost inevitably would be more needed at home, not off on Earth.
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Hm, the more I think about this, the more it seems a thread on colonization would be a good idea.
 
Penta:

You seem to be seeing things very much in a 20th/21st century way.

If there's anything I've learned from ST, it's that the human beings in it are different from the ones we see today. Didn't Quark observe that?

I don't think that they will be quite as anxious to see a whole universe populated by humans. They will be less colonising. They might establish an outpost or too, but they will not displace any Amerindians.

I think that human beings will be so successful on their own planet, that they will not need to ravish another. The only argument for establishing humans on another planet would be in case ours is destroyed by some disaster.

And, I also think that if there were colonies, they would be much more independent than one today. Humans would not own other humans, or owe them faith.

They would just have to sign up to a charter of basic rights.
 
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The question of resources/accountability is important if it's a state sponsored colony but I'm sure there are numerous colonies started with completely privately owned resources. I'm sure they still have to get permission from the Ministry of Colonization to start the colony in the first place, but I doubt they would welcome a UFP appointed 'dictator' ruling over them.

I'd say that in purely local matters (and after all, at that small a size they would hardly have any other matters to think about) they get a great degree of autonomy but the Ministry reserves the right to oversee the colony and put it under direct UFP governorship.

As for represantation maybe numeruos small colonies in the same region of space can combine their voting power and elect a joint observer to the Council.

All this brings up the question - which laws (criminal etc.) would apply to the colonists? Do they make their own laws (doubtful if it's a small colony)? Are there prewritten laws made by the UFP for this type of situation? At which point do the colonists stop being citizens of the Member States (or earlier UFP colonies) from which they came (and thus stop being subject to their laws)? Who gets to settle at the colony anyway?

You, know, Penta, that new colonization thread isn't such a bad idea...
 
Neozeks: You ask good questions I have no quick answer for. New colonization thread created.:)
 
As for represantation maybe numeruos small colonies in the same region of space can combine their voting power and elect a joint observer to the Council.
If multiple planets in the same general region had a combined population above a certain number they would "share" a representative. As the individual worlds increased in populace they would gradually split off this collective to have their own representative.

The US Constitution says that a representative can't represent fewer that thirty thousand people, with the exception that each state get at least one representative.

If there was a Federation Governor initially, I think as the colony grew and established their own planetary state the Fed Governor would drop to a advisory position and eventually become irrelevant. The world would "grow out" from underneath the colonal administration. The office of the Federation Governor would at some point become basically like an embassy. Once completely independent the question of the planet joining the Federation as a member would be debated and voted upon.

Like the idea of completely private concerns establishing colonies, but if a new colony had a population of a few tens of thousand, located in a group of valleys somewhere, can they claim the entire planet? Or might private colonists, member colonists, and Fed colonists be located in multiple separate areas of the same planet?

Hm, the more I think about this, the more it seems a thread on colonization would be a good idea
Would love to see you do a separate thread just on the EU planetary government. And what part (if any) the old nations play in the organizational structure. The effect of having the UFP home based there. When they took the swans away from the Queen did she cry?

:lol:
 
T'Girl: Oh, boy.

I'll leave the colonial stuff for the colonization thread.

Describing United Earth would be incredibly hard to do without the thread getting derailed or descending into a flamewar. It requires a number of political evolutions to simply get to UE, let alone to the UFP. Trying to figure out how even one of those evolutions happened, and the knock-on effects, would be difficult.

I do have a simple solution: If the Monarchy exists, nobody took the swans away. I mean, why would they bother?:)

(The British Monarchy existing would be an open question I'm not getting into, because it'd depend highly upon how United Earth got to being.)

To be quite honest, moreso than for any fictional planet, even well-known ones like the Vulcans, in order for us to decide what UE looks like, we'd need to decide how it got that way. Which would be incredibly hard, because we can't really use the handwaving you can pull off with everybody else. You somehow have to get from here to there and have it all make sense in the details if what you write is going to come off as credible.
 
I think you should watch 'Encounter at Farpoint' again.

The US constitution didn't exist 400 years ago. Is it likely that it will in another 400?

You seem to see things in 21st Century terms.

I think man will be less colonising in the ST Universe.
 
James Madison didn't create the Constitution out of thin air. While the Constitution didn't exist until 222 years ago, many of the intellectual concept concerning freedom, liberty, limits on government, had been theorized and debated for centuries. Depending on the structure of the United Earth state, it is possible that the United States of America still exists in some form in the 24th century. Ethiopia as a nation is more than 4,900 years old.

I like to think that much of the Constitutions of both United Earth and the UFP were pulled in whole blocks from the US Constitution.

As far as seeing the future through the prism of modern times ... maybe. And while I believe that people will still grow food, build things and make babies, I think we all are underestimating the influence of non-humans upon the Federation and also on future Humanity itself. These aren't just going to be quasi-humans with blue skin and pointed ears. Their culture and psychology will completely baffle us. This could lead us into a mentality where we don't just simply remain Human, but seek to actively define ourselves as Human.

I don't see the characters on the various series as self identifying as primarily Federation citizens. Picard is French, Troi is Betazed, Riker's from Alaska, Sisko from New Orleans, McCoy is southern, Spock isn't just from Vulcan. He is Vulcan. If pushed all of them would declare "Oh, well I'm a Federation citizen too." But in a social conversation Kirk will state he is from Iowa.
 
I don't think the UFP is a nation-state. I would think it is more akin to a supranational organization, and similar in some way to the present day EU. Member states retain their sovereignty but agree to abide by Federation law. Federation law is not imposed on members, but established by consensus of the members.

Sovereignty being retained by the member worlds is evidenced by Kor being appointed Klingon ambassador to Vulcan. If the Federation were a fully sovereign state, only an ambassador to Paris would suffice and relations with Vulcan would be handled by a Consul-General.
 
^ Oh, boy, I'm just waiting for Sci to show up... :lol:

Suffice to say that while their are signs that the Federation probably was a supranational organization at some point and that some relicts from that period have remained even to the 24th century, the vast majority of evidence points to it being a real state in it's own right (for one, the EU has no military).
 
Different races will possess various reproduction rates, the Horta's is very slow. Masao Okazaki's The Starfleet Museum postulate a Federation history where the Human race reproduces so fast and founds so many colonies, that it begin to cause problems with other Federation members, especially given that Humans dominate Starfleet and use it to assist their colony expansion.

http://www.starfleet-museum.org/

Well this could explain why humans seems to dominate starfleet (starfleet academy is on earth, not on vulcan) in the 24th century, while in 22th century, manking is just a junior space power compared to the vulcans.

Perharps vulcans are much less numerous than human. So Humans vs vulcans would be a bit like China vs japan.
30 years ago, japan was much more powerful than China (economically at least), thanks to advanced technology.
But now that China, with 10 times more people, have mostly catched up with japanese technology, it's outrunning japan in abut every area.
 
Returning to this thread after being absent for several days (sorry, these posts take a lot of time and energy to write!)...

You can't serve two masters.
That's the point I'm trying to make, the members are the masters, the central government is their servant. It exists solely for their needs. Community, protection, security, trade.

The problem with this idea is that it defies the majority of the canonical evidence. We've seen distinct evidence that the Federation practices federalism in the modern sense, that Federation law overrules Member State law, and that sovereignty falls to the Federation (though there seems to be dual sovereignty).

The evidence? The Federation Council gets to set a Federation-wide Warp 5 speed limit in "Forces of Nature." The Federation President gets to conduct foreign relations without consulting the Member State governments in Star Trek VI. In "Journey to Babel," Sarek indicates that Federation law even regulates the distribution of wealth within a Federation Member State when he notes that if Coridan joins the Federation, its wealth will be administered for the benefit of its people according to Federation law. Most of all, in "Homefront"/"Paradise Lost," we see the Federation President declare martial law on a Federation Member State's capital planet, and we hear other Federation Members being spoken of as regarding the Federation President as "their" president.

The preponderance of evidence is that the Federation is a federal state. It probably gives far more autonomy to its Member States than present-day federations, but it remains a state, not a mere confederation or alliance.

I very much doubt the governments of Earth, Andor, Vulcan, Tellar, AC created the Federation so they could then hand over their authority and control to it.

Why not? The thirteen states in the Union created the modern United States federal government and handed over their authority and control to it after they realized that the confederation created in the Articles of Confederation was not powerful enough. The Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Scotland even dissolved themselves and handed power over to a new Kingdom of Great Britain in 1707. The Communist states of Eastern Europe handed over their sovereignty to the newly-created Soviet Union in the early 20th Century. The provinces of northern North America handed authority to a federal government called Canada in the late 1860s. The colonies of Australia federated into their own federal Commonwealth in the early 1900s. Etc.

History is full of states that willingly give up their sovereignty to larger federal unions if they feel it's better for them to do so.

The only power the Federation has is what is delegated to it by the member planets.

Then why is there, for instance, a Federation Naval Patrol ("Thirty Days," VOY)? Surely that's the sort of thing the Federation would have no authority over.

Local laws also apply within the star system of a member state - Federation laws apply in "Deep Space", areas outside the gravity well of the system star.

Federation law is in the area of interstellar space (warp speed limits) and interactions between member states, commerce, trade.

Again, the problem with this claim is that "Journey to Babel" and "Homefront" make clear the exact opposite is true: Federation law applies even to the internal affairs of Member States. A Federated Coridan would be obliged to distribute its wealth in a way that benefits the general population; the Federation President can declare martial law on a Federation world without consulting that world's Member State government. Hell, even "Accession" establishes that the Federation bans all forms of caste-based discrimination in Federation Member States (and the novel Articles of the Federation establishes that slavery is also banned).

Some additional thoughts.
* The Federation lacks the power to directly tax the member states.

This part is just absurd. I'm sorry, but that was one of the reasons the American confederation collapsed in the 1780s -- it wasn't possible two hundred years ago for a government to function on the world stage without the ability to tax its members. How could the Federation possibly function on the galactic stage, having to marshal that many more resources, if it cannot tax its Member States or their citizens?

* Not all member states are democracies. But they all do possess a single stable government.

I fundamentally disagree with this idea. The Federation has consistently been depicted as disrespecting undemocratic regimes, and the only Federation Members we've ever seen have been established to be some form of democracies. How could a Federation based on the ideas of freedom and self-determination not require its Member States to gain democratic mandates from their citizens?

So, I'm thinking, what kind of representation do people from these colonies get? They're not Member State citizens so they don't elect Councillors.

Oh, I dunno about that.

I think the most elegant solution would be this:

When a new colony is founded that is not considered a colony of a Member State, that colony has the option of either declaring independence, cutting itself off from the Federation and all of its Member States and automatically granting to its inhabitants a new citizenship, or it has the option of establishing itself as a Federation colony.

For Federation colonies, the residents will retain their prior Member States citizenship until such time as that colony becomes a Member State in its own right. As such, they would retain the right to vote absentee in their prior Member State elections, including elections for Federation Councillors or Member State parliamentary elections. The Federation colony would retain its status as a Federation colony until its population reaches a certain size as defined by statute, at which point it could apply for Federation Membership.

Once Membership is conferred upon the colony, that Member can never cease being a Member unless its population votes to secede and declare independence, and the new Member State's population is given new citizenship and loses their prior Member State citizenship unless they move back to their prior Member State.

I assume they still get to vote in the presidential elections.

Oh, certainly.

In terms of how many people any given Federation Councillor represents on the Council, the only real comparison I can think of in a democracy would be the Lok Sabha in India, whose members have so many constituents that there are serious questions about how any one person could possibly represent so many people or be democratically accountable. I'd consider it almost inevitable that you'd end up with some Member States with populations so large that they might opt for a form of indirect democracy with their Federation Councillor.
Which brings up the question of how the Federation President is elected. After all, he represents far more people than any single Councillor. Should he also be indirectly elected, by the Council? OTOH if he's elected by the Council, people from the above mentioned colonies get no vote at all. Maybe some kind of Electoral College is in order (a real one, not just a formal one like in the US), with representatives from both Member States (and their colonies) and federal colonies?

The novels establish -- and I agree with -- a direct popular election for the President. Yes, the presidency is going to be less democratically accountable because of the sheer size of its constituency, but that's always the case for any presidency. Presidents are supposed to be more independent than legislators, so I don't object to that idea.

So, I'm thinking, what kind of representation do people from these colonies get? They're not Member State citizens so they don't elect Councillors. Maybe they have non-voting representatives? What if their colony is very small?
I assume they still get to vote in the presidential elections. If you relocated to one of United Earth's colonies I think you would still be a UE citizen. If on the other hand you were to immigrate to another Member states home world or colony, until you became a "naturalized" citizen there, you probably wouldn't get a vote.

Why make it so hard? Surely citizenship shouldn't be hard to acquire from Member State to Member State -- freedom of movement within the Federation should be a Constitutional right the way it is in liberal democracies today. They should probably just be required to declare their new Member State to be their Member State of permanent residence and thereby gain their new Member State citizenship (and lose their old Member State citizenship) after a given length of time (maybe a standard year or so).

Just before the Dominion war it would be easy to imagine the Federation's population approaching one trillion. A popular election might be unwieldy.

Why? Federation computer technology is so much more advanced that they tend to count their data in quads, a unit of data so large we don't even know how large it is in comparison to modern units. I sincerely doubt that the mere ability to count is beyond Federation science, even if elections take a while to tabulate.

Given the size of the Federation, would the candidates campaign on all the member worlds and the larger colonies too? Multiple cities on each world. It's hard to see a sitting president taking that much time away from official duties.

I would tend to hope that the people of the Federation would be educated enough not to hold it against a candidate if he or she didn't get around to stumping on their particular planet. 150 Member States, most of those with multiple planets under their jurisdiction? I think a reasonable Federation populace wouldn't hold that against a candidate so long as a good-faith effort was made to get to at least all of the different general regions of the Federation.

It's amazing to read of people here who can't concieve of a world without money.

Reagan and Thatcher have so much to answer for.

I agree that Reagan and Thatcher have a lot to answer for, particularly their support for murderous South American dictatorships.

But the simple fact that money will always exist, even if poverty and great disparities in levels of personal wealth are eliminated, is not the same thing as supporting modern Capitalism.

Money hasn't always been around. Before that, we had barter.

Yes, and barter was a horribly inefficient system. Jim wants some shoes from Bob, but Jim can only trade a banjo for the shoes and Bob wants drums, not a banjo, so Jim has to trade his banjo to Billy to get some drums. Only Billy doesn't have drums, Billy has a violin, so Jim has to get Billy to trade his violin to John in return for a fiddle, which Jim then trades his banjo to Billy for to get some drums so he can give those drums to Bob in return for some shoes. Oy gevalt!

Money wasn't invented because it's evil; money was invented because it simplifies trade and facilitates peaceful interaction that way.

The thing is, you're system isn't much better than the system we have today.

Only someone who has never been in danger of losing their home and who has never not known how they were going to eat next week could possibly claim that that system is not decidedly superior to the one we have today.

Penta:

You seem to be seeing things very much in a 20th/21st century way.

If there's anything I've learned from ST, it's that the human beings in it are different from the ones we see today. Didn't Quark observe that?

Actually, Quark's usual soapbox point was that Humans are not that much different in the 24th Century than they were in the 20th. Witness his rant about how Humans are as savage as Klingons if threatened in "The Siege of AR-558."

And, no, Humans of the 24th Century are not inherently different, or better, than people today. They like to spout that propaganda, but it's nonsense. People are people. The cultures are different, not the people.

I think that human beings will be so successful on their own planet, that they will not need to ravish another. The only argument for establishing humans on another planet would be in case ours is destroyed by some disaster.

That's just ridiculous. People want to spread out and always will -- and as long as they're not displacing native inhabitants, there's nothing wrong with that. Why shouldn't people be allowed to colonize an uninhabited world?

You're confusing Star Trek's depiction of colonization -- the process of establishing permanent Federation settlements on worlds where intelligent life has not evolved -- with real-life colonialism.

T'Girl: Oh, boy.

I'll leave the colonial stuff for the colonization thread.

Describing United Earth would be incredibly hard to do without the thread getting derailed or descending into a flamewar. It requires a number of political evolutions to simply get to UE, let alone to the UFP. Trying to figure out how even one of those evolutions happened, and the knock-on effects, would be difficult.

I do have a simple solution: If the Monarchy exists, nobody took the swans away. I mean, why would they bother?:)

(The British Monarchy existing would be an open question I'm not getting into, because it'd depend highly upon how United Earth got to being.)

For whatever it's worth, Articles of the Federation established that United Earth was founded with the signing of the Traité d'Unification in Paris in 2130. A number of states remained holdouts, though, with the last state -- the Independent Republic of Australia -- not signing on until 2150 (Enterprise: Kobayashi Maru), the year before the NX-01 was launched.

They also establish that United Earth practices federalism, which seems to mean that the states that join U.E. remain in existence. This is confirmed when the President of the United States is depicted as touring the devastated City of San Francisco after the 2375 Breen attack along with the Prime Minister of United Earth and President of the United Federation of Planets. (It's also confirmed in an address seen onscreen on a computer display in ENT's "Afflication," which refers to San Francisco, CA, as being in the USA in the address line.)

We know for a fact that the Royal Navy existed on Earth as recently as Malcolm Reed's early 20s, which would indeed be the 2130s ("Silent Enemy"). Personally, I see no reason not to think that the United Kingdom remains a part of U.E. and that the British Monarchy still exists.

We also know from Vulcan's Forge that the Israeli Knesset still exists in the 2290s, and from Kobayashi Maru that Israel and Palestine finally came to some sort of mutually-acceptable solution to their conflict.

I don't think the UFP is a nation-state.

Of course it's not. It's a multinational state.

But it's not a supranational organization like the European Union. The Federation President wouldn't have the power to declare martial law if it were.

Sovereignty being retained by the member worlds is evidenced by Kor being appointed Klingon ambassador to Vulcan. If the Federation were a fully sovereign state, only an ambassador to Paris would suffice and relations with Vulcan would be handled by a Consul-General.

Sort of? On the other hand, we know from numerous films and episodes that the Federation conducts foreign relations on behalf of its Member States without seeking their permission or input. So the fact that there exists ambassadorships to Federation Member States does not automatically mean that they remain the ability to conduct their own foreign relations.

For comparison, states in the U.S. retain the authority to conduct some foreign relations, and to even enter into compacts with foreign states, provided that they remain subject to federal regulation from Congress. I see no reason to think this isn't also possible for the Federation and its Member States.

Well this could explain why humans seems to dominate starfleet (starfleet academy is on earth, not on vulcan) in the 24th century, while in 22th century, manking is just a junior space power compared to the vulcans.

I don't think we've seen enough of the Federation Starfleet to presume that Humans make up the majority of its membership. Any number of Human-looking officers could actually be non-Humans whose species Humans simply resemble (Ardanans, Betazoids, Bajorans, etc.), for instance. Meanwhile, we've only gotten a good look at four Starfleet crews out of a Starfleet of hundreds of ships and starbases. Hardly enough to come to any sort of conclusion about its overall makeup.

On top of that, it's been canonically established that Starfleet Academy has satellite campuses throughout the Federation. I'm sure there's a Starfleet Academy campus in ShiKahr and in Laibok and in Ashalla and in Leran Manev.
 
Yeah, but elsethread we've also established that it's also fairly unlikely that SFA can train all the officers SF needs.
 
Yeah, but elsethread we've also established that it's also fairly unlikely that SFA can train all the officers SF needs.

Why? Assuming that Starfleet Academy establishes a large branch campus on the capital planet of every Federation Member State, plus who knows how many other branch campuses on other major worlds, I see no reason that an Academy with over 150 branch campuses with thousands of cadets each can't train the majority of Starfleet officers.
 
How come, then, have we seen precisely two officers, in one episode, who've come out of SFA campuses other than San Francisco?
 
How come, then, have we seen precisely two officers, in one episode, who've come out of SFA campuses other than San Francisco?

Presumably because the Federation is big and we've only ever gotten a good look at four crews.
 
There is something i woukld like to point out... In dS9 during the dominion war i heard two sinteresting things (couldn't name the epis) .
once, a reference about fighting "alonf the vulcan border"
And once, the dominion establishing a supply line "into betazoid territory"

This implies that members may not just be planets. Each of them may have a chunk of space, several star systems.
 
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