No. The membership list of the Global Risks Alliance (GRA) Leaders Council is not publicly disclosed as a matter of policy, legal obligation, and fiduciary design. The Global Centre for Risk and Innovation (GCRI), as the legal custodian of the GRA and the Planetary Nexus Governance (PNG) system, enforces the strictest confidentiality, data protection, and privacy protocols governing all Council operations and membership records.
These protocols are implemented in full compliance with the following international legal frameworks:
- European Union General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
- Swiss Federal Act on Data Protection (FADP)
- Canada’s Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA)
- California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
- United Nations privacy and CSO data security guidelines
Visibility and Consent-Based Disclosure
Upon appointment, each GRA Leaders Council member is granted the right to control their visibility status within the Nexus Ecosystem via the Nexus Platforms. Members may elect to appear with either a “public” or “private” governance profile, and that designation is binding unless formally updated by the member.
- Members with private status are fully protected under GRA’s confidentiality clauses.
- Their names, affiliations, institutional roles, and governance participation are not disclosed, shared, or made available to any internal or external party without express, written consent.
Zero Disclosure to Third Parties
GRA’s membership data is never sold, shared, or disclosed to any external entities, including:
- Governments or public agencies
- Private sector stakeholders or donors
- Journalists, researchers, or media platforms
Access to the complete membership registry is strictly limited to a small number of internal fiduciary bodies, including:
- The GCRI Board of Trustees (BoT)
- The Central Bureau (CB)
- Designated auditors and legal officers, under strict compliance protocols
All access is audited, legally scoped, and exercised solely for charter-mandated governance functions, including legal compliance, fiduciary oversight, and capital governance review.
Conditions for Public Disclosure
Public identification of GRA Leaders Council members is permitted only under the following conditions:
- Opt-in Consent: The member has affirmatively chosen to appear as public via their Nexus Platform profile.
- Formal Appointment: The member is officially serving in a public-facing role (e.g., on the Board of Governors or Regional Stewardship Board) and has provided written consent to be publicly named.
- Public Representation: The member has been involved in external-facing policy consultations, official declarations, or publications, and their name appears with verified authorship consent.
Protection Against Risk and Political Interference
This confidentiality framework is intentionally designed to protect GRA Leaders Council members—including those who may be:
- Public officials, central bank advisors, sovereign fund managers, or diplomats;
- Scientific researchers, civil society leaders, indigenous stewards, or ESG-aligned investors.
Protection extends across jurisdictions and is especially critical in sensitive geopolitical or regulatory environments. It safeguards members against:
- Political retaliation
- Reputational harm
- Institutional coercion
- Unauthorized data exposure
Data Sovereignty and Compliance Infrastructure
GRA’s member data is:
- Encrypted and stored under Nexus Ecosystem’s zero-trust infrastructure
- Governed by clause-certified data management protocols
- Audited for continuous compliance, including jurisdictional safeguards in Swiss and Canadian law
- Subject to zero-disclosure rules unless compelled by a binding international court order, and even then, only with prior review by the BoT and member notification when appropriate
The GRA Leaders Council is governed under the highest global standards of digital sovereignty, legal privacy, and institutional integrity. Members—whether Affiliate, Fellow, or Patron—are protected by a sovereign-grade trust architecture that ensures:
- Full control over their identity and participation profile
- Legal compliance with multilateral data laws
- Confidentiality across all programmatic and governance layers
- Protection from undue influence, data misuse, or reputational risk
In a governance environment increasingly defined by transparency, legitimacy, and public-interest capital, GRA’s privacy protocols reflect its commitment to trustworthy, lawful, and ethically grounded multilateral leadership.
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