SARs
How Special Administrative Regions could provide a practical path to autonomy through partnership with host countries.
While there are still other unclaimed lands on Earth, most of them remain unoccupied for difficult reasons or would likely attract competing claims before settlement could become practical. Because of that, Liberland's most realistic path today may be a diplomatic agreement with an existing country over an underused area.
The offer is straightforward: Liberland can help turn an unsettled or underutilized area within a host country's territory into a populated and economically active place, bringing in residents, capital, and local demand that can also benefit the host country through taxes and wider development.
In exchange, Liberland seeks autonomy within that area. This model is generally known as a Special Administrative Region, or SAR. Such a project would be a long-term partnership in which trust grows with successful development, and the autonomy of the region could expand over time.
Liberland does not see itself as necessarily limited to one territory. The community and jurisdiction could be expressed through more than one place if that proves practical and beneficial.