PLENA's receipt grammar is designed to support evidence and accountability obligations typical of programs administered by the major multilateral institutions. PlenaProof does not represent any current contract, accreditation, or endorsement by these institutions.
What makes PLENA fit for multilateral work is that it is non-aligned planetary trust grammar: locally sovereign in every member state and federated globally by one shared receipt format, subordinated to no single geopolitical pole. Multilateral programs span jurisdictions that do not share a database, a regulator, or a political orbit — so a receipt format anchored in Silicon Valley, Beijing, or Brussels carries dependencies a UN body, development bank, or observer mission cannot universally accept. A VRX-1 receipt is self-attested and verifiable by anyone, which lets a record issued under one national framework be checked under another without any party joining a foreign system. This is structural, not political — PLENA takes no side between blocs; it offers neutral trust infrastructure that institutions across all of them can use on their own terms.
International institutions are category-defining buyers of accountability infrastructure. Each operates programs requiring beneficiary verification, project execution accountability, evidence preservation, and audit-ready documentation across multiple jurisdictions and languages. PLENA's receipt grammar — refusal, human review, authorship, consent, correction, and public verification — maps directly onto these requirements without replacing identity systems, financial rails, or programmatic decision-making.
For each: the relevant programmatic surface, what PLENA's receipt grammar serves, and an explicit no-contract truth boundary.
Relevant surfaces: UNHCR and IOM refugee and migrant credential portability; UNESCO academic-credential and journalism integrity; UN Global Compact corporate accountability reporting; Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) progress accountability; UN Women and UNICEF evidence preservation for vulnerable populations.
What PlenaProof serves: cross-border credential-portability receipts, refusal-receipt logging for declined claims, multi-archive preservation of vulnerable-population evidence, and public-readable SDG progress verification.
PlenaProof has no current contract, accreditation, or endorsement from any UN agency.
Relevant surfaces: ID4D Initiative (Identification for Development) supporting national identity systems; the Procurement Framework integrity mechanisms; project-lending accountability; anticorruption mechanisms; climate-finance attestation.
What PlenaProof serves: a trust layer around ID4D-supported national identity deployments (not replacing ID4D); procurement evidence packets; refusal-receipt records for declined claims; named-human attestation receipts for project-execution milestones.
PlenaProof has no current contract, accreditation, or endorsement from the World Bank Group.
Relevant surfaces: central bank digital currency advisory; financial-integrity surveillance; macroprudential review.
What PlenaProof serves: receipt-grammar support for CBDC governance evidence at the member-state level; named-human attestation receipts for financial-integrity review.
PlenaProof has no current contract, accreditation, or endorsement from the IMF.
Relevant surfaces: infrastructure-project lending across BRICS+ member states; multi-currency settlement; project-execution accountability.
What PlenaProof serves: project-accountability receipts for infrastructure programs; multi-currency cross-border evidence sealing.
PlenaProof has no current contract, accreditation, or endorsement from the New Development Bank.
Relevant surfaces: the High 5 priorities (Light up and power Africa; Feed Africa; Industrialize Africa; Integrate Africa; Improve quality of life for Africans); African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) implementation accountability; project-lending evidence; climate finance for Africa.
What PlenaProof serves: AfCFTA cross-border trade-documentation receipts; project-execution attestation; multilingual cultural verification across the continent.
PlenaProof has no current contract, accreditation, or endorsement from the African Development Bank.
Relevant surfaces: the AU Continental AI Strategy (adopted July 2024); the AU Malabo Convention on Cybersecurity and Personal Data Protection; the Pan-African Parliament's emerging Cybersecurity and AI Model Law.
What PlenaProof serves: receipt grammar aligned with the Continental AI Strategy's stated organizing principles of sovereignty, strategic autonomy, and equitable adoption. See the dedicated page: PLENA & the AU Continental AI Strategy Alignment.
PlenaProof has no current contract, accreditation, or endorsement from the African Union, Smart Africa, the Africa AI Council, or the Pan-African Parliament.
Relevant surfaces: EU AI Act Article 16 (high-risk AI provider obligations including quality management system and technical documentation); MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation) stablecoin attestation; the European Digital Identity (EUDI) Wallet (W3C VC-based identity infrastructure); Horizon Europe research accountability; Erasmus+ student-mobility credentials; the NIS2 cybersecurity directive incident reporting.
What PlenaProof serves: receipt-grammar support for EU AI Act Article 16 documentation and logging obligations; a complementary application layer to EUDI Wallet's W3C VC infrastructure; research-accountability receipts; cross-border student credential portability.
PlenaProof has no current contract, accreditation, or endorsement from any EU institution, agency, or regulatory body.
For procurement officers, programme managers, and institutional buyers at multilateral institutions: PlenaProof welcomes pre-pilot conversations. Submit through the Institutional Pilot page.