Network State Environmental, Social, and Governance Framework (NS-ESG): A Composite Sustainability Reporting Standard for Digitally-Native Communities Operating Across Sovereign Jurisdictions
ネットワーク国家のための環境・社会・ガバナンスフレームワーク(NS-ESG):主権管轄を越えて活動するデジタルネイティブコミュニティ向けの複合サステナビリティ報告基準 (AI 翻訳)
Kate M Grey
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
本論文は、デジタルネイティブなネットワーク国家向けに初の総合的なサステナビリティ報告基準であるNS-ESGを提案する。既存のESGフレームワークでは対応できない5つの構造的問題(法的形態、クロス管轄、プロトコル排出配分、メンバー福祉のポータビリティ、センサス完全性)を解決する13指標の枠組みを提供し、32のネットワーク国家に適用した結果を示す。
English
This paper proposes NS-ESG, the first composite sustainability reporting standard for digitally-native network states. It addresses five structural gaps in existing ESG frameworks (legal-form, cross-jurisdictional, protocol emissions allocation, member welfare portability, census integrity) with a 13-indicator framework across four pillars. An illustrative application to 32 network states reveals that Ârc scores higher on ESG than its credit rating due to its no-token stance.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
日本のGX文脈では直接的ではないが、新しい主体(ネットワーク国家)に対するサステナビリティ報告の枠組みは、日本が進めるデジタル田園都市構想やブロックチェーン活用コミュニティのESG開示に示唆を与える可能性がある。
In the global GX context
This framework challenges existing ESG standards by addressing entity-type gaps for digitally-native communities. It contributes to global disclosure scholarship by proposing protocol emissions allocation methods and a 'Digital Sovereignty' pillar, which could inform future ISSB/GRI discussions on emerging entity forms.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:This paper provides a novel framework for sustainability reporting in decentralized digital communities; useful for scholars studying ESG for non-traditional entities.
📄 Abstract(原文)
This paper proposes the Network State Environmental, Social, and Governance Framework (NS-ESG), the first systematic composite sustainability reporting standard for digitally-native communities operating across sovereign jurisdictions. The framework completes a four-paper research programme alongside the Network State Classification Framework (NSCF), the Network State Credit Rating Framework (NSCRF), and the Network State Economic Index (NSEI). Existing ESG reporting frameworks fail for Network States on five structural dimensions: (i) the legal-form problem — Network States do not match the corporate or sovereign reporting entity types assumed by ISSB, ESRS, GRI, B Corp, and the UN Global Compact; (ii) the cross-jurisdictional problem — members and operations span multiple legal regimes simultaneously; (iii) protocol emissions allocation — no accepted methodology exists for allocating L1/L2 blockchain emissions to specific reporting entities; (iv) member welfare portability — health, pension, and dispute resolution rights that follow members across borders are unmeasured; and (v) census integrity — proof-of-personhood as a foundational sustainability metric is absent from existing frameworks. The NS-ESG addresses these gaps with a thirteen-indicator framework organised across four pillars: Pillar E — Environmental (3 indicators, 25% weight): Total network footprint (with novel TVL-share + gas-share blended protocol emissions allocation), chain carbon intensity, and physical-node sustainability. Pillar S — Social (4 indicators, 25% weight): Member welfare portability index, cross-jurisdictional labour compliance, diversity of membership and governance, and dispute resolution integrity. Pillar G — Governance (4 indicators, 30% weight): Tokenomic equity (Nakamoto coefficient), treasury transparency, proposal integrity, and regulatory posture. Pillar D — Digital Sovereignty (2 indicators, 20% weight): Data residency and privacy, and proof-of-personhood integrity. This is a novel pillar with no analogue in ISSB, ESRS, GRI, or B Corp frameworks. The composite NS-ESG score (0–100) maps to a 10-notch tier scale (NS-ESG-AAA through NS-ESG-D) architecturally aligned with the NSCRF for cross-framework consistency. A pillar-failure penalty function caps the overall score at 2× the weakest pillar composite when any pillar falls below 30, preventing high scores in one dimension from masking dangerous weakness in another. The framework is applied illustratively to 32 Network States including the original NSCRF cohort (Network School, Prospera/Infinita, Zuzalu, Praxis, CityDAO, Liberland, Afropolitan) plus 25 expansion entities (Gelephu Mindfulness City, Kleros, Edge City, Catawba CDEZ, Don't Die, Urbit, Proof of Humanity, Frontier Tower, Itana, Ciudad Morazán, Liberstad, Ârc, and 13 others). Notable findings: Ârc ranks higher on NS-ESG (BB) than on NSCRF (CCC) due to its no-token stance and chartered-accountant founder discipline; CityDAO and Afropolitan score above their credit ratings due to on-chain governance posture; founder-led Network States score systematically lower on Pillar G even when other pillars are strong. The framework is intended for formal standards proposals to ISO (via Standards Australia, target TC 207 Environmental Management or TC 322 Sustainable Finance), GRI Sector Program (Digital Communities / Network States), the ISSB Sustainability Working Group, the UN Statistics Division, the UN Global Compact, and the WEF Stakeholder Capitalism Metrics initiative. An NS-ESG-Light variant (7-indicator subset) is proposed for pop-up Network States where durability-dependent indicators are inapplicable. This paper completes the four-paper research programme. Companion papers: Grey, K. M. (2026). Network State Classification Framework (NSCF) v2.1. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19561980 Grey, K. M. (2026). Network State Credit Rating Framework (NSCRF) v1.1. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19562422 Grey, K. M. (2026). Network State Economic Index (NSEI) v1.0. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19563284
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- openalex https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19674199first seen 2026-05-15 18:07:01
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