Rubric Coast Consortium: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
(No difference)

Revision as of 17:39, 13 February 2022

Rubric Coast Partnership
  • ⵉⵎⴷⴰⴽⵍⵦⵏ ⴳ ⵜⵉⵢⵉⵔⴰⵜ ⵜⴰⵣⴳⵡⴰⵖⵜ (Adrasic)
  • Partenariat de la Côte Rubrique (Audonic)
  • Consortium Rubrica Ora (Latin)
  • 𐤀𐤇 𐤃𐤌 𐤂𐤁𐤋𐤉𐤌 (Tyrian)
Flag of Rubric Coast Consortium
Flag
Logo of Rubric Coast Consortium
Logo
Location of Rubric Coast Partnership member states (dark green) in North Scipia (light green)
Location of Rubric Coast Partnership member states (dark green) in North Scipia (light green)
TypeInternational organization
Member states
Leaders
• Messidorian delegate
Talahara Yolande-Minerve Saverne
• Tyreseian delegate
Tyreseia Yoana Wechsler
Formation
• Establishment of the Messidor Union
1831
• Unification of the Workers' Federation
1881
• Ratification of the Rubric Coast Treaty
1890
Area
• Total
1,510,720 km2 (583,290 sq mi)
• Water (%)
3.52
Population
• 2020 estimate
85,589,850
• Density
56.66/km2 (146.7/sq mi)
GDP (nominal)2020 estimate
• Total
$2.42 trillion
• Per capita
$28,216.32
CurrencyMessidorian marque
Messidorian qarit
Tyreseian piaster
Time zoneUTC±0 and UTC+1

The Rubric Coast Partnership is a treaty organization composed of the Messidor Union and the Workers' Federation of Tyreseia formed in December 1890. Taking its name from the Rubric Coast, a shallow bay that borders the Periclean Sea from the western end of Aɣmatia to the eastern border of Tyreseia, the Rubric Coast Partnership is a series of agreements ratified under the Rubric Coast Treaty.

The agreements under the Rubric Coast Treaty govern a variety of areas. These include free trade, freedom of movement, energy grid integration, defense arrangements, and alliances between labour unions. Proposed agreements include a common currency, the merging of labour unions, and the formation of a Rubric Coast legislature. These proposals, among others, were not adopted.

In the present day, the Rubric Coast Partnership primarily facilitates industrial development and the exchange of resources and experts between the two nations. Labour union alliances mean that industry standards for education and safety are similar between the two countries, and also facilitate temporary migration for work or full-term immigration. The Rubric Coast Partnership also includes military defense plans, as well as coordination in logistics and technological development.

History

In 1879, Azmelqart Sidduni, a military commander, executed a coup against the Tyreseian government with the support of the nation's trade guilds. After unifying the Workers' Federation in 1881 and protecting the first elections, military reforms to discourage another coup were swiftly passed, abetted in part by strong developing relations with the neighbouring Messidor Union. Both syndicalist states shared major political objectives and cultures, though the execution of their systems differed. The political isolation of the two states and the hostility of neighbouring and regional monarchist powers led to even further rapprochement. Despite this, both states had to reckon with each other's cultural, social, and political differences.

New Aɣmat City, c. 1890

The Rubric Coast Treaty was first drafted bilaterally with the intent of defining relations between the two states. In some early drafts, the Treaty was closer to the constitution of a new nation composed of Aɣmatia, East Merovia, and Tyreseia. The legislative and radically integrative provisions of the treaty were dropped as Tyreseians generally wanted to preserve their own sovereignty. The Messidorians also wished to maintain their constitutional arrangements.

The Treaty was ultimately signed and ratified in 1890. In its final form it was made into a living document that could change with the evolving relations of its two member states. Defining the borders of the nations, trade and tariff laws, and the rights of each state's citizens with regard to the other were among the earliest concerns. To achieve the purpose of the Treaty as a live document, the Rubric Coast Partnership was created to manage and deliberate on the relations of the member states. The Partnership is a treaty organization composed of government officials from each state, though power is delegated to agents and diplomats in practice.

Structure

In theory, the head of state of each nation co-chairs the governance of the treaty organization. In practice, power is delegated to each state's embassy doyens who jointly form the Rubric Coast Partnership Committee. The Messidorian delegates are ultimately beholden to the President of the Union while Tyreseian delegates are beholden directly to the Supreme Workers' Council.

The partnership has no permanent headquarters. Documents are typically stored in embassies or state archives. Conferences are generally held in a variety of locations including government buildings but also hotels or convention centres.

Languages

All agreements and the establishing treaty of the Rubric Coast Partnership are written in four languages: Adrasic, Audonic, Latin, and Tyrian. The former two of these are the national languages of the Messidor Union. The latter two are the most common, though unofficial, languages of the Workers' Federation. Conferences and the negotiation process, in general, make use of these four languages as well, with translation services if necessary.

Border and movement treaties

The Qeshet River south of Tsabratan, looking across to North Zwawa.

The border between Aɣmatia and Tyreseia had long been defined by the Qeshet River that divides the two nations in the north. South of the Adrasic Mountains and the river's source, the border in the Ninva Desert remained porous and uncertain. Even in the 19th century, Kel Tenere populations in both nations paid little regard to where previous border claims lay and many existing border claims were contradictory. Most maps of the era simply marked approximate, dotted lines south of the mountains to mark the general area of the borders, but these lines were neither respected nor enforced.

As the Tyreseian syndicalist state stabilized in the 1880s, both its new government and that of the Messidor Union made it a prerogative to officially define their borders. One of the first agreements ratified under the Rubric Coast Treaty was the Qeshet Meridian Agreement of 1890. This agreement marked the Qeshet River as the official border in the north, plotted a defined border through the Adrasic Mountains and then followed the titular meridian south through the desert, carving out an additional region at the southern edge used by a Kel Tenere group of Tyreseian origin.

Despite their prerogative to define the borders of their respective nations, the members of the Rubric Coast Partnership also sought to increase mobility for workers, tourists, and commercial transportation. In 1901, the Trans-Qeshet Mobility Agreement introduced visa-free travel between citizens of the two states. Border stations were maintained for tariff control, immigration services, and other exigent circumstances.

Economic treaties

Nuclear power in Tyreseia

The Free Exchange Agreement of 1920 established free trade between Tyreseia and the Messidor Union. While individual unions may retain the right to preferred exchange with domestic suppliers, government-imposed tariffs and general duties at border crossings were abolished upon the agreement's ratification under the Rubric Coast Treaty. The inclusion of a free trade agreement was initially contentious. Many unions were afraid that the value of their labour could be undercut by foreign competition. Ultimately, the understanding that unions in both nations would endeavour to maintain relative parity in terms of labour value while enabling greater efficiency and access to resources led to its acceptance and ratification.

The Rubric Coast Partnership has also included a bundle of agreements that have served to integrate the energy grids of Tyreseia and the Messidor Union. Tyreseian nuclear plants contribute energy to Messidorian cities, particularly in North and South Zwawa at a preferred rate. In turn, the Messidor Union provides a large quantity of petroleum products to Tyreseia for emergency stockpiling and consumer use.

Labour alliances

Alliances between Messidorian and Tyreseian labour unions existed in informal or non-legal forms since the late 19th century. However, in 1944, the Union Alliance Form Agreement was ratified under the Rubric Coast Partnership, creating a voluntary framework for labour unions in a given state to form an alliance with a union in an equivalent industry in the other state. Unions can adopt the form voluntarily, though its adoption requires ratification by the membership of each constituent union.

The major benefits of the framework are both budgetary and political. Labour alliances are able to transfer funds between unions to fund development, industrial expansion, and union infrastructure. Committees in the alliances can establish further parity in working conditions and remuneration for workers. Labour alliances can also legally act as cartels by coordinating the pricing and distribution of products. The major political benefits of labour alliances are budgetary, but pooled resources with regard to political advocacy is another soft power benefit.

Military treaties

The Rubric Coast Joint Defense Plan was initiated in 1918, prior to the Messidorian annexation of the Timna Strip in 1919. Each member state is committed to the defense of the other. Accordingly, the Joint Defense Plan includes a number of protocols. These include activation and mobilization protocols and emergency preparations. War defense plans in the event of a variety of invasion scenarios also exist to cooperatively protect each state's sovereignty. Other programs under the Joint Defense Plan include joint training, exercises between units from the member states' armed forces, and intelligence sharing.

Messidorian and Tyreseian forces have been activated for mutual defense purposes on several occasions. The most recent occasion was during heightened tensions between the Messidor Union and Yisrael following the Gran Aligonia crisis and the Onekawan affair. Conversely, the Joint Defense Plan is not inherently invoked by belligerent actions undertaken by either of the member states. Thus, Tyreseian forces did directly take part in either the 1919 Annexation of the Timna Strip or the 1951 Reunification of Kirthan.

Development and logistics

File:FAMAS F1 G 2.png
Messidorian (top) and Tyreseian (bottom) variants of the RC-77 rifle

Prior to the integration of the Joint Defense Plan in 1918, Messidorian and Tyreseian arms syndicates had already begun to coordinate in the research and development of military equipment, as did civilian enterprises with product design and manufacturing efficiency. In 1933, the Rubric Coast Joint Development Agreement was introduced to formalize the process of developing, trialing, and adopting military equipment between both nations. While the JDA facilitates the exchange of equipment and cooperation in developing materiel, it does not mandate that either member state adopt identical equipment in accordance with the different needs that each state may have.

The JDA was supplemented by the Rubric Coast Logistics Agreement in 1939. The Logistics Agreement created a framework of standardization for equipment for the two member states. Equipment, ammunition, and ordnance could thereafter be exchanged by each member state's armed forces in an emergency or otherwise practical circumstances. Plans for supply lines or other forms of emergency provisioning have also been integrated into the Joint Defense Plan via the Logistics Agreement.

Proposed and abandoned treaties

In the late 19th century, it was proposed that a Rubric Coast Congress should be created to legislate matters of inter-state importance beyond the authority of each member states' head of state or national legislature. The members of the congress would be democratically elected from unions in each member state and limited jurisdiction. Ultimately, concerns regarding the constitutional implications of the congress's authority in addition to implications on the sovereignty of each member state led to the proposal being dropped. Regardless, the concept has retained a degree of discursive currency over subsequent generations.

Another early proposal which did not proceed forward would see all labour unions in both the Messidor Union and Tyreseia matched by industry and merged to fully mobilize workers and reduce competition. The proposal faced a number of major barriers. Most notably the different political systems in each member state would make interactions more complex. In addition, unions in each of the member states were not siloed off into identical industries, with some featuring more vertical integration than others in the neighbouring state. Merging unions would thereby necessitate major restructurings of each member state's economy, such that it would not be practical.

See also