An open instrument for citizens

A republic is captured when its rights need a patron to work.

The Captured Republic measures the distance between the rights a state guarantees on paper and the access a citizen can use without knowing someone. The law on the books is the easy half. Whether it answers when you knock is the half that decides who the state serves.

The idea

Capture hides inside working institutions

A captured state is rarely a broken one. The courts sit, the registry opens, the budget passes, the election is held. Capture lives in the gap between all of that working on paper and a citizen being able to use it without a patron, a connection, or a bribe.

Corruption indices count what changes hands. This measures something quieter and harder to buy back: the distance between the right you were promised and the access you can actually reach. A country can score clean on graft and still leave most of its people outside the counter, waiting for someone to know someone.

Name that distance and you can measure it. Measure it and you can close it.

Two instruments

One measures the disease. One measures the cure.

The Captured Republic is built around a matched pair. The first names how far a republic has been captured. The second names what recovery actually looks like, in things a citizen can open, follow, and appeal.

The framework

Six ledgers

Capture is not one failure. It runs through the ledgers where a state keeps its promises, and each one can be read for the same gap. The index and the toolkit are both built on them.

01
Land and inheritance
Who holds title, who is left off it, and can a daughter inherit what a son does?
02
Fiscal sovereignty
Can the state tax the people strong enough to refuse, or only the people who cannot?
03
Public money and procurement
Where does the money go after the contract is signed, and can anyone follow it?
04
Justice and rule of law
Does a court move for someone who has no patron and no name to drop?
05
Administrative discretion
Is a public job won on merit, or granted for loyalty and lineage?
06
Narrative freedom
Can the press still report what happened, and can the public still remember last year?

Who it is for

Built for two readers

The same instrument answers two needs. A citizen wants to know where the state stands and what to ask for. An institution wants a sourced measure it can defend.

A citizen, anywhere
A plain reading of where your republic stands, and a toolkit that turns each finding into something you can ask for: a record, a timeline, a written reason. The resources are built to be used in any country, against any office that owes you an answer.
Open the toolkit
People who work on governance
A structured, sourced index built on indicators your institution already trusts, reframed through one question: who the state serves, and whether rights stand without patrons. The method is open, the data is dated, and nothing is asserted that cannot be checked.
See the method

Removing a ruler is the easy part. Rebuilding the ledgers is the hard part, and the part that decides whether the next government inherits a republic or a machine. This is where the hard part starts.