Repairing the Constitutional
Omission of Care
We find ourselves living within the failures of the American Constitution—failures that were built into its foundation.
The Constitution organized power but not responsibility. It secured property before belonging. It defined liberty as freedom from interference rather than freedom within relation. What it omitted—care as a structural principle—became the void around which the nation was built.
Project Reconstitution proposes a constitutional framework for rebuilding democracy around care, relation, and integrity. Not as moral preference, but as structural necessity.
What does this framework propose?
A constitutional reorientation around three principles:
Relation as foundation — not property or independence, but interdependence as the condition of all political life.
Restorative rupture as method — ten principles for care-tethered transformation when institutions refuse accountability.
Care-based alternatives — demonstrated across governance, economy, family, education, environment, and health.
Download Resources
Complete framework with appendices on key terms and philosophical roots
Quick overview of diagnosis, principles, and pathways
About the Author
Melissa Cosgrove
Melissa Cosgrove is an independent scholar working at the intersection of philosophy, political theory, and care ethics. Her theoretical framework, the Dynamic Fractal Theorem of Relation (DFTR), proposes that all reality operates through patterns of rupture-repair-care. Project Reconstitution applies this work to constitutional analysis. She writes regularly about care, relation, politics, and culture on The Care Paradigm Substack, and her academic papers are published on PhilArchive. She is a mother to two young children, and based in Chicago.