The Denebolian Accord Alliance is organized as a confederal alliance between sovereign Member Nations. It does not replace national governments or create a single federal state. Instead, it establishes shared institutions for coordination, diplomacy, trade, transport, public safety, crisis response and joint operations.
The institutional structure of the Alliance is built around the Accord Council, Accord HQ, Accord Secretariat, Accord Commissions, Strategic Joint Command, Accord Civil Protection Service and GUARD. Each body has a defined mandate under the Accord and is limited by the principle that Member Nations retain their sovereignty except where the Accord expressly provides otherwise.
The Accord Council provides political direction. The Secretariat ensures administrative continuity. The Commissions coordinate specific policy fields. SJC manages authorized international joint operations. CIPS provides public safety in Accord-controlled and international areas. GUARD acts as a neutral emergency and stabilization authority under strict conditions.
This structure allows the Alliance to act collectively when needed, while preventing the Accord from becoming a centralized state authority over its members. The result is a layered system of cooperation, where shared institutions support alliance-wide stability without erasing national independence.
1. Accord Council
The Accord Council is the highest political decision-making body of the Alliance. It is composed of the leadership of the Member Nations and is responsible for major political decisions, emergency reviews, amendments, Accord Regulations and alliance-wide strategic questions.
The Council does not operate as a permanent government seated in one place. Under Article XIX, the Council has no permanent seat as a standing institution. Its official meeting place will be the Accord HQ in Denebol Prime after its construction, unless another venue is designated for urgent or exceptional circumstances.
The Council plays a central role in conflict resolution. Under Article II, high-priority conflicts require a summit of the Accord Council, while medium and low-priority conflicts may be resolved through remote meetings. Catastrophic situations may allow immediate temporary action, but such action remains subject to later Council review.
Current council members:
Denebolian representative: Lt. Col. Samantha Carter, Ph.D.
Arnorian representative: High King Anárion Argonaut Andúnion
Amaurëan representative: Simetrikal
Accord HQ
The Denebolian Accord Alliance Headquarters, or Accord HQ, is the main institutional venue of the Alliance. It is planned to be constructed in Denebol Prime, Panthalassa.
Under Article XIX, Clause 95, Accord HQ serves as the primary venue for Accord Council summits, commissioner conferences and official alliance coordination. Until its completion, certain high-level meetings may continue to take place in existing designated venues such as the Three Nations Building.
Accord HQ is therefore not simply an administrative building. It is the main physical symbol of the Alliance and the central place for institutional coordination between Member Nations.
2. Accord Secretariat
The Accord Secretariat is the permanent civil administrative organ of the Alliance. It is responsible for the everyday administrative continuity of the Accord.
Under Article XIX, Clauses 97–98, the Secretariat maintains Accord archives, registers and official records; prepares agendas and documentation for Council sessions; publishes and distributes Accord Regulations and official communiqués; and coordinates the work of Accord Commissions.
The Secretariat does not replace national ministries. Its role is administrative, archival and coordinative. It ensures that the Accord functions as a continuous legal and institutional framework even when the Council is not in session.
Institutional Balance
The Alliance structure is designed to balance cooperation and sovereignty. Member Nations remain sovereign, but they coordinate through common institutions where shared action is necessary.
The Accord Council provides political authority. The Secretariat provides administrative continuity. The Commissions coordinate policy fields. SJC manages authorized joint operations. CIPS provides public safety in Accord-controlled zones. GUARD acts as a neutral emergency and stabilization authority under strict conditions.
Together, these bodies create an alliance that can function across diplomacy, security, trade, infrastructure and crisis response without becoming a centralized state.
3. Accord Commissions
The Accord Commissions are confederal coordination bodies of the Alliance. Under Article XX, the Accord establishes five commissions:
Commission for Trade & Economy
The Commission for Trade & Economy coordinates the Alliance's shared economic framework, including trade standards, corridor procedures, market-access rules and economic cooperation between Member Nations.
Its most important operational field is the system of Accord Trade Access Corridors. Under Article III, these corridors are standardized alliance routes, hubs and procedures for the movement of goods, services and authorized persons between Member Nations. Trade between Member Nations operates as a tariff-free internal market, subject to agreed standards, safety rules and restricted-goods controls.
The Commission also oversees the Trade & Corridors Authority, which enforces compliance within Accord Trade Access Corridors and designated corridor facilities. Inside Member Nation territory, trade enforcement remains the responsibility of national authorities, but inside corridor jurisdiction the Accord framework applies.
Commission for Education, Culture & Research Exchange
The Commission for Education, Culture & Research Exchange coordinates educational cooperation, cultural exchange, qualification-recognition frameworks, research programs and scientific collaboration between Member Nations.
Under Article XIII, Member Nations shall promote education, cultural exchange and mutual understanding across the Alliance. The Commission manages Accord-wide coordination of exchange programs, educational recognition frameworks and cultural cooperation, while national governments keep authority over domestic education systems, curriculum, language policy and cultural legislation.
The Commission also has a role in high-impact research coordination. Under Article XIV, Accord-level coordination of standards, safety protocols, training interfaces and research exchange relating to subdimension technology is handled through this Commission together with any designated security authority established by Accord Regulation.
Commission for Transportation & Infrastructure
The Commission for Transportation & Infrastructure coordinates transport systems, interplanetary access, corridor infrastructure, transport-node standards and shared infrastructure planning between Member Nations.
Under Article VIII, Member Nations support interplanetary transport for lawful travel and logistics between their territories under agreed procedures and safety standards. The Accord also defines key transport infrastructure, including Stargate access on INFINITY station, TRACE as the primary diplomatic and transit control point, and DIUSS / INFINITY as designated interstellar checkpoint infrastructure.
The Commission's role is to support compatibility between national transport systems and Accord-controlled transport nodes. National authorities remain responsible for enforcement outside Accord-controlled transport nodes and designated corridor jurisdiction, while public safety and first response in Accord-controlled transport nodes and corridor hubs are provided by CIPS.
Commission for Civic Rights & Standards
The Commission for Civic Rights & Standards monitors the human-rights baseline and civic standards of the Alliance. Its role is not to replace national courts or domestic legal systems, but to maintain a shared minimum standard for Accord institutions, Accord-controlled areas and situations where Alliance obligations apply.
Under Article IV, Member Nations must uphold fundamental rights, including the right to life, liberty and security, freedom of expression, fair process, privacy, access to information and freedom from torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. These protections apply in peace, crisis, conflict, occupation, detention and emergency-response operations.
The Commission may monitor compliance with Article IV and issue non-binding reports, recommendations and minimum due-process standards applicable to Accord-controlled or international areas and Accord institutions. Accord Regulations may also establish additional procedural safeguards, reporting duties and review mechanisms.
Commission for Foreign Affairs & Diplomacy
The Commission for Foreign Affairs & Diplomacy coordinates diplomatic cooperation, treaty communication, liaison activity, embassy relations and alliance external representation where the Accord requires common action.
Its work is closely connected to Article XVIII, which allows Member Nations to establish embassies, permanent missions and liaison offices for diplomacy, treaty coordination, trade relations and alliance communication. TRACE serves as the primary alliance diplomatic and liaison hub unless the Accord Council designates additional hubs.
The Commission supports the diplomatic side of the Accord without replacing national foreign ministries. Member Nations remain sovereign in their external relations, but diplomacy connected to the Accord, official missions, embassy protections, liaison activity and international coordination can be structured through this Commission and the Accord Secretariat.
Each Member Nation appoints one Commissioner to each Commission. Each Commission has a rotating Chair, following a schedule adopted by the Accord Council.
The Commissions coordinate standards, procedures, registries and cooperative programs within their scope. They may draft proposals and instruments, but they do not create binding law by themselves. Binding implementation occurs only through Accord Regulations adopted under Article XXVIII.
Military Cooperation Structure
Strategic Joint Command (SJC)
The Strategic Joint Command, or SJC, coordinates international joint operations involving forces from multiple Member Nations. It does not command national forces in ordinary national operations.
Under Article XXI, SJC coordinates joint mission planning, tasking and operational integration only under a mission mandate authorized by the Accord Council. International joint missions coordinated by SJC remain subject to political oversight by the Accord Council and administrative mandate management by the Accord Secretariat.
This structure preserves national sovereignty while allowing the Alliance to act together when a mission is formally authorized.
Accord Civil Protection Service (CIPS)
The Accord Civil Protection Service, or CIPS, is the Alliance's international public safety and emergency response service.
Under Article XXII, CIPS provides civilian policing, public order services, emergency medical response, firefighting, rescue operations, emergency engineering and incident stabilization within its jurisdiction. Its jurisdiction is limited to Accord-controlled or international areas, including the Accord HQ campus, TRACE, designated public sectors of DIUSS and INFINITY, corridor hubs and designated Accord-controlled sectors.
CIPS does not conduct general policing inside Member State territory and does not command national armed forces. Its role is focused on Accord-controlled spaces, international zones and corridor environments.
GUARD
GUARD — the Government Utility Authority, Reinforce Division — is recognized by the Accord as a neutral supranational authority with operational independence.
Under Article V, GUARD may operate in Member Nation territory, Accord-controlled areas, corridor jurisdictions and relevant space or planetary domains where action falls within its Accord mandate. Its intervention powers are limited by strict triggers, including prevention of mass harm, prevention of inter-member war, containment of prohibited technology, grave rights breaches, collapse of civil order, terrorism, piracy, smuggling or threats to Accord-controlled infrastructure.
GUARD must act only where necessary and proportionate. It remains neutral and may not act to advance the political, territorial, ideological or economic interests of any Member Nation.
Accord Directives & Regulations
The Denebolian Accord distinguishes between core mandatory directives, Accord Regulations, Accord Space Regulations, corridor rules and voluntarily adopted national directives.
Under Article XXVIII, only three International Directives are mandatory across the Accord by default: the Prime Directive, the Influence Directive and the Security Directive. Any other Denebolian or SHIELD directive is not automatically binding at Accord level unless adopted by the Accord Council as an Accord Regulation, or voluntarily adopted by a Member Nation under its own national law.
Core Mandatory Directives
Directive DHS-0110/10 - Prime Directive
The Prime Directive forms one of the core mandatory directives of the Accord. It applies as a baseline rule for alliance conduct where Accord activity could interfere with protected political, civilizational, cultural or developmental processes.
Directive to regulate interactions with less developed planets. This directive aims to prevent interference in the natural development of such planets while fostering diplomatic relations with technologically advanced civilizations. The establishment of the T.R.A.C.E. base facilitates controlled communication and ensures compliance with the directive's provisions among members of the Denebolian Accord, their allies, and trade partners. Additionally, first contact with less developed planets is allowed but only under the rules of the Influence Directive to ensure responsible and ethical interaction.
Directive DHS-0823/25 - Influence Directive
The Influence Directive is a core mandatory directive regulating improper influence, manipulation or interference in political and social development. It supports the Accord's commitment to sovereignty, stability and non-coercive cooperation between Member Nations.
Influence Directive delineates clear guidelines for engaging with less technologically advanced civilizations, emphasizing the imperative of respecting cultural diversity and sovereignty. Failure to comply may lead to diplomatic consequences, underscoring the Republic's steadfast commitment to ethical interstellar engagement. Through the Influence Directive, the Republic solidifies its position as a stalwart advocate for justice and equity, shaping a future characterized by harmonious and principled interstellar relations
Directive DHS-0615/20 - Security Directive
The Security Directive is a core mandatory directive dealing with alliance security, classified matters, restricted systems, sensitive technologies and protected infrastructure. It is especially relevant to SHIELD, GUARD, corridor security, Accord-controlled areas and technology restrictions.
The Security Directive was enacted to safeguard the security of member states and SHIELD operations within the Denebolian Accord. It aims to maintain confidentiality regarding sensitive information to prevent potential threats to agents and states. By enforcing strict confidentiality measures and reciprocal assistance agreements, the directive ensures mutual trust and cooperation among member states and SHIELD. Any breach of these conditions may lead to expulsion from the Alliance and hostile recognition of the offending state.
Security Directive applies only with Accord Council approval, no member or non-member nation can use this directive without council permission.
Mandatory Compliance Framework
All Member Nations must comply with:
- the conditions of the Accord;
- Accord Regulations adopted by the Accord Council;
- International Directives enacted by SHIELD or the Denebolian government only where they are adopted as Accord Regulations or adopted by a Member Nation as national law.
The Accord also sets a hierarchy of norms. In case of conflict, the order is:
- the Accord itself;
- Accord Regulations adopted by the Accord Council;
- Accord Space Regulations and corridor rules within their designated jurisdictions;
- national law, except where the Accord expressly provides otherwise.
Accord Regulations
Accord Regulations are binding alliance-wide rules and standards adopted by the Accord Council and recorded by the Accord Secretariat. They govern Member Nation obligations and the operation of Accord institutions.
Adopted Accord Regulations
No separate Accord Regulations have been listed yet.
The Accord itself creates the authority for future Accord Regulations, but any specific regulation should be added to the public registry only after formal Council adoption and Secretariat recording.
Possible future Accord Regulations
Regulation DAR-TEC001/26 - Trade & Corridor Compliance
Regulation DAR-TEC001/26 forms the basic compliance regulation for trade conducted through the Denebolian Accord Alliance framework. It applies to goods, services, operators and authorized persons using Accord Trade Access Corridors or designated corridor facilities.
This regulation establishes unified documentation standards, cargo declarations, corridor waybills, clearance procedures, inspection rules, routing obligations and compliance duties. It ensures that tariff-free internal trade between Member Nations remains predictable, secure and compatible with Accord safety requirements.
DAR-TEC001/26 also defines the role of the Trade & Corridors Authority in corridor jurisdiction. While national authorities remain responsible for trade enforcement inside Member Nation territories, corridor compliance is enforced through the Accord framework.
Regulation DAR-TEC002/26 - Restricted Goods
Regulation DAR-TEC002/26 establishes the Accord-wide framework for identifying, declaring, inspecting and controlling restricted goods moving through Accord trade systems.
The regulation applies to goods that may create security, military, ecological, biological, technological or diplomatic risk. This may include weapons, military-use components, dual-use systems, hazardous materials, restricted alloys, prototype research materials, sensitive biological cargo and other controlled categories.
The purpose of this regulation is not to prohibit trade, but to ensure that high-risk goods are properly declared, reviewed and routed. Shipments may be cleared, delayed, redirected, quarantined, restricted or refused depending on risk level and applicable Accord rules.
Regulation DAR-TEC003/26 - Sensitive Technology Protection / Directive DHS-0232/21 - Tollan Trade Directive
Regulation based on the principles of the Directive DHS-0232/21 - Tollan Trade Directive. It adapts the Denebolian technology-control model into an alliance-wide framework for Member Nations, Accord Trade Access Corridors and Accord-controlled areas.
This regulation applies to the transfer, export, exchange, disclosure or integration of technologies that could compromise member security. It covers not only physical technologies, but also technical documentation, equipment, operational procedures, research data and other associated information.
DAR-TEC003/26 supports the Accord requirement that trade regulations and directives must ensure fair trade practices and prevent the transfer of sensitive technologies that could compromise member security. It therefore provides the general alliance framework for controlling military-use, destructive, dual-use, strategically destabilizing or otherwise restricted technologies.
Regulation DAR-DC001/26 - Subdimension Technology
Regulation establishes the operational and safety framework for the development, testing, transfer, integration and deployment of subdimension technology.
Subdimension technology is treated as a high-impact and high-risk category because of its potential to cause wide-area destabilization, major security breaches and severe cross-border consequences. All approved subdimension-related activity must take place under controlled procedures, secure documentation and alliance-level reporting.
This regulation defines approval procedures, containment duties, emergency reporting, research transparency, incident response and technology-handling standards. No Member Nation, institution or private entity may deploy subdimension technology outside approved Accord procedures and without express permission by Arnorian government.
Regulation DAR-DC002/26 - Amaurëan Technology
Regulation establishes the restricted handling framework for Amaurëan, or Eldarian, technology.
Amaurëan technology is treated as a restricted high-risk category due to its strategic sensitivity, uncertain hazard profile and possible destabilizing effects. Its use, replication, modification, transfer, export or integration is prohibited unless specifically permitted under the Accord and applicable Accord Regulations and approved by Amaurëan government.
This regulation defines controlled research environments, reporting duties, containment standards, incident-response obligations, approved transfer procedures and restrictions on concealment. Unauthorized possession, testing or transfer of Amaurëan technology constitutes a material breach of the Accord.
Regulation DAR-CIPS001/26 - CIPS Public Safety
Regulation establishes the operational framework for the Accord Civil Protection Service.
CIPS provides civilian policing, public order services, emergency medical response, firefighting, rescue operations, emergency engineering and incident stabilization within Accord-controlled and international areas. This includes Accord HQ, TRACE, designated sectors of DIUSS and INFINITY, corridor hubs and other designated Accord-controlled areas.
The regulation defines CIPS procedures for scene security, evidence collection, public-order management, first response, emergency stabilization and enforcement of Accord Space Regulations. It also confirms that CIPS does not conduct general policing inside Member Nation territory and does not command national armed forces.
Regulation DAR-CFD001/26 - Embassy and Mission
Regulation manages embassies, permanent missions, liaison offices and diplomatic representation within the Denebolian Accord Alliance.
The regulation defines procedures for establishment, recognition, security coordination, staff registration, diplomatic access, liaison rights, mission protection and communication with the Accord Secretariat.
It applies to Member Nation embassies, Accord missions, Associate Member liaison offices and diplomatic facilities operating in designated Accord jurisdictions. Its purpose is to protect diplomatic function while maintaining security, public order and clear administrative responsibility.
Regulation DAR-CRS001/26 - Basic Rights & Due-Process
Regulation establishes procedural safeguards for Accord-controlled areas, Accord institutions, corridor jurisdictions and international zones under Accord administration.
The regulation implements the Accord's human-rights baseline, including the right to life, liberty and security, fair process, freedom from torture or cruel treatment, privacy and access to information except where lawfully classified.
It defines minimum rules for detention, questioning, administrative penalties, corridor bans, emergency restrictions, evidence handling, access to review and proportionality of enforcement. It also supports the role of the Commission for Civic Rights & Standards in monitoring compliance and issuing recommendations.
Regulation DAR-CFD002/26 - Associate Member Corridor Access
Regulation defines how Associate Members and Partners may receive access to Accord Trade Access Corridors.
Associate Members do not receive automatic corridor privileges. Access must be granted through Accord Regulation or Secretariat listing and may be limited by clearance level, route, cargo type, purpose of travel, approved operator or diplomatic status.
This regulation defines admission conditions, documentation duties, security declarations, technology-handling restrictions, inspection rules, corridor suspension, targeted bans and revocation of access. It allows structured cooperation with affiliated partners while preserving the distinction between full Member Nations and partial participants.
Regulation DAR-CFD003/03 - Accord-controlled Areas
Regulation defines the legal and administrative status of areas placed under Accord jurisdiction or international Accord administration.
Such areas may include Accord HQ, TRACE, designated public or administrative sectors of DIUSS and INFINITY, corridor hubs, diplomatic zones, Accord-controlled galactic sectors and other sites designated by the Accord Council.
The regulation defines administrative responsibility, applicable law, CIPS jurisdiction, security coordination, public-access rules, emergency procedures and the relationship between Accord authority and national jurisdiction.
Accord Space Regulations
Accord Space Regulations are enforceable local rules that apply only within designated Accord-controlled or international areas. They may regulate conduct, public order, safety procedures and administrative offenses in those areas.
Adopted Accord Space Regulations
No separate Accord Space Regulations have been listed yet.
Possible future Accord Space Regulations
Space Regulation DASR-TC001 - ACCORD HQ
Space Regulation applies to the Accord Headquarters campus and designated Accord HQ districts.
It regulates public access, diplomatic movement, security perimeters, ceremonial areas, administrative zones, public-order rules, emergency response, visitor registration, press access and protected Council facilities.
The purpose of this regulation is to ensure that Accord HQ functions as the main institutional venue of the Alliance while remaining safe, accessible and operationally neutral.
Space Regulation DASR-TC002 - TRACE
Space Regulation applies to the TRACE base and its designated diplomatic, transit and corridor-processing areas.
It regulates diplomatic traffic, stargate arrivals, identity verification, travel routing, liaison access, trade mission processing, public safety, customs support and emergency response.
TRACE functions as a controlled communication and transit hub. This regulation ensures that movement through TRACE remains organized, documented and compliant with Accord procedures.
Space Regulation DASR-TC003 - DIUSS
Space Regulation DASR-TC003 — DIUSS applies to the DIUSS interstellar checkpoint and its designated public, administrative, cargo and security sectors.
It regulates starship arrivals, freight processing, docking procedures, cargo inspection, quarantine routing, crew verification, restricted-goods screening, emergency holds and transfer to corridor lanes.
The regulation supports DIUSS as a primary interstellar checkpoint until its functions are transferred or partially replaced by successor infrastructure.
Space Regulation DASR-TC004 - INFINITY
Space Regulation applies to INFINITY station and its designated international, transport, diplomatic, corridor and public-safety sectors.
It regulates stargate access, interstellar checkpoint functions, station movement, authorized personnel, cargo transfer, high-security areas, emergency response and coordination between CIPS, transport authorities and corridor enforcement.
INFINITY is treated as successor and next-generation infrastructure for major Accord transport and corridor functions.
Space Regulation DASR-TC005 - Accord Trade Access Corridors
Space Regulation applies to the shared corridor spaces, hubs, route segments and designated facilities used for Accord trade and authorized movement.
It regulates corridor access, lane status, documentation checks, cargo holds, routing restrictions, inspection points, bonded operators, emergency closure and public-safety response inside corridor jurisdiction.
This regulation works together with DAR-TEC001/26 and DAR-TEC002/26 to ensure that the corridor system remains secure, predictable and enforceable.
Space Regulation DASR-TC006 - Accord-controlled Areas
Space Regulation applies to all Accord-controlled or international areas not covered by a more specific space regulation.
It establishes general rules for public order, access control, emergency response, administrative offenses, CIPS authority, visitor conduct, restricted zones, signage, evidence handling and temporary bans.
Where a more specific regulation applies, that specific regulation prevails. Where no specific regulation exists, DASR-TC006 provides the default legal framework.
Unlike ordinary Accord Regulations, Accord Space Regulations do not need to apply inside the domestic territory of every Member Nation. They are binding only inside the designated Accord-controlled area.
Corridor Rules
Under the Accord, national authorities enforce trade rules inside Member Nation territory, while the Trade & Corridors Authority enforces compliance inside corridor jurisdiction under the Commission for Trade & Economy.
Adopted and possible future Corridor Rules are listed in Trade & Economy section of Alliance pages.
Controlled Space & Areas
The Denebolian Accord separates three types of controlled space: Accord-controlled areas, galactic sectors controlled by the Accord, and galactic sectors controlled by Member Nations.
Accord-controlled areas are specific facilities, hubs, station sectors or corridor sites where Accord Regulations, Accord Space Regulations, CIPS services and corridor rules may apply directly.
Galactic sectors controlled by the Accord are broader strategic sectors placed under Accord authority, usually because of their diplomatic, transport, security or interstellar importance.
Galactic sectors controlled by Member Nations remain under the sovereignty of the relevant Member Nation, unless a specific site or corridor inside the sector is separately designated as an Accord jurisdiction. This system allows the Alliance to coordinate shared space without erasing national authority where it remains applicable.
Interstellar Charts with designated Galactic Sectors
Designated Accord-Controlled Areas
Designated Accord-controlled areas are the places where Accord institutional rules apply directly. These areas may include headquarters, diplomatic hubs, transit stations, corridor facilities, administrative sectors and public zones under Accord jurisdiction.
Within these areas, CIPS provides public safety, emergency medical response, firefighting, rescue operations, public order services and incident stabilization. CIPS may also enforce Accord Space Regulations within its jurisdiction.
Trade compliance inside corridor jurisdiction is handled by the Trade & Corridors Authority. This means that CIPS is responsible for public safety, while the Trade & Corridors Authority is responsible for documentation, routing restrictions, corridor holds, clearance procedures and corridor bans.
ACA-001 - ACCORD HQ
Institutional / diplomatic area.
Applicable framework - DASR-TC001, CIPS, Accord Regulations
ACA-002 - TRACE
Diplomatic / transit hub.
Applicable framework - DASR-TC002, CIPS, Accord Space Regulations, Corridor Rules
ACA-003 - DIUSS
Interstellar checkpoint.
Applicable framework - DASR-TC003, CIPS, Accord Space Regulations, Corridor Rules
ACA-004 - INFINITY
Interstellar hub / station.
Applicable framework - DASR-TC004, CIPS, Accord Space Regulations, Corridor Rules
ACA-005 - ACCORD TRADE ACCESS CORRIDOR HUBS
Corridor infrastructure.
Applicable framework - DASR-TC001, CIPS, Trade & Corridors Authority
ACA-006 - OTHER ACCORD-CONTROLLED AREAS
Designated sites.
Applicable framework - DASR-TC006 or specific regulation.
Designated Galactic Sectors Controlled by Denebolian Accord
Designated galactic sectors controlled by the Accord are broader areas placed under Accord authority, rather than under the sole sovereignty of one Member Nation.
These sectors may include international space, strategic transport zones, Accord-administered corridors, demilitarized areas, shared diplomatic sectors, protected interstellar zones, neutral meeting sectors or areas placed under Accord control by Council decision.
The purpose of this designation is to clarify that the Accord has direct responsibility for administration, security coordination, corridor management, public safety, access rules or strategic neutrality within the sector.
Unlike a single Accord-controlled building or station, an Accord-controlled galactic sector may contain several facilities, routes, controlled zones, restricted areas or public-access spaces. Not every point inside such a sector must have the same level of regulation, but the sector as a whole falls under the Accord framework.
Galactic Sectors controlled by DA
ACS-001 - Yavanna Galactic Sector
Applicable framework - Accord Regulations, Accord Space Regulations, Corridor Rules.
ACS-002 - Ganos Galactic Sector
Applicable framework - Accord Regulations, Accord Space Regulations, Corridor Rules.
ACS-003 - Arnak Galactic Sector
Applicable framework - Accord Regulations, Accord Space Regulations, Corridor Rules.
ACS-004 - Melkor Galactic Sector
Applicable framework - Accord Regulations, Accord Space Regulations, Corridor Rules.
Designated Galactic Sectors controlled by Member Nations
Designated galactic sectors controlled by Member Nations are broader territorial, strategic or administrative sectors under the lawful authority of a Member Nation.
These sectors may contain planets, stations, installations, habitats, vessels, protected sites, trade routes, military areas or local jurisdictions. Their purpose is to clarify which Member Nation is responsible for governance, enforcement, infrastructure and security in the sector.
A sector controlled by a Member Nation remains under that Member Nation's sovereign law, unless a specific part of the sector is separately designated as:
- an Accord-controlled area;
- an Accord-controlled galactic sector;
- a corridor jurisdiction;
- an alliance facility;
- an international station sector;
- a protected diplomatic zone;
- another site established by Accord Regulation.
Galactic Sectors Controlled by Denebolian Republic
Full control - Oblio, Rotego
Partial control - Protego-Labiris, Nexo-Labiris, Visa-Prave, Ottrigo
Galactic Sectors Controlled by Kingdom of Arnor
Full control - none
Partial control - Lachim, Ottracio, Tarc, Narn, Rtep, Gafi, Demulio, Romus, Morphi, Richo, Salo, A'dira, Greppo
Galactic Sectors Controlled by Amaurëa
Full control - none
Partial control - none
