Our Focus

At the Constitutional Order Institute, we treat peace as a measurable outcome of institutional health. Like physicians investigating chronic illness, we do not limit ourselves to surface symptoms—we trace dysfunction to its source. Our work targets three interrelated layers of conflict that corrupt the political body: institutions, laws, and individuals.

Institutions

Institutions are the organs of the state—each designed to perform a specialized function: legislating, adjudicating, enforcing, regulating and so on. When properly structured and regularly inspected, they deliver public goods with precision and neutrality. But when centralized, captured, or designed without checks, these organs mutate—accumulating power, blocking circulation, and paralyzing the body politic

We investigate:

We issue institutional diagnoses based on functionality, accountability, and alignment with republican principles.

Laws

Laws are prescriptions of the disease called conflict. But not all laws act as medicine. Some are toxins—crafted to suppress dissent, entrench privilege, or criminalize liberty. Others are ineffective treatments: overly broad, ideologically driven, or selectively enforced.

We analyze:

We maintain a Global Tracker of Unjust Laws and recommend targeted repeals, rewrites, or judicial remedies.

Individuals

Institutions do not rot on their own. Laws do not write themselves. Behind every malfunction lies human agency: those who inspire, design, defend, and operate dysfunctional institutions and unjust laws.

We scrutinize:

These individuals are not simply products of bad systems—they are often the architects and defenders of systemic decay. We name them. We track their decisions. And when necessary, we recommend targeted professional, political, or legal accountability.

Civic Literacy

Just as a healthy body requires nutrition, hygiene, and informed habits, a healthy republic requires institutional literacy, public vigilance, and clear civic standards. 

We teach:

We design public materials, offer workshops, publish accessible reports, and work with educators, reformers, and media platforms to spread this knowledge widely.