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ARQUA

Authority Drift

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Context Classification

Context Code: AA-10

Layer: Authority Failure Mode

Structural Pattern: Authority Drift

Primary Condition: Declared Authority Diverges From Execution Surfaces

Institutional Behaviour: Inconsistent Approvals And Workarounds

Context

Authority drift occurs when declared authority structures gradually diverge from the systems and execution surfaces where institutional consequences actually bind. The organisation continues to describe authority in one form, while execution reality evolves elsewhere.

Automation, workflow evolution, and system change can shift where decisions are executed without updating the authority model that is presumed to govern those decisions. As integrations are added, processes are refactored, and execution becomes distributed across platforms, the effective commitment boundary moves.

When the authority model does not move with the commitment boundary, the institution compensates. Approvals become inconsistent because different execution paths imply different authority assumptions. Policy is overridden informally to keep work moving. Operational workarounds appear as “known safe” routing paths, manual checks, or ad-hoc delegation.

Escalation chains emerge as a substitute for clarity, routing ambiguity upward when the correct authority cannot be determined in-system. Over time, audit and review functions are pulled into reconstruction mode, assembling after-the-fact evidence of who approved what, under what basis, and whether the decision should have been permitted.

In structural terms, authority drift is not a performance issue. It is a misalignment between declared authority and the evolving topology of execution.

Related Contexts

  • Authority Before Action as a Structural Constraint
  • Execution Sovereignty Failure
  • Escalation as a Symptom of Missing Authority
  • Frontline Discretion Without Machine-Expressible Authority
  • Shadow Authority Formation
  • Audit and Review as Post-Hoc Authority Reconstruction
  • Context Library

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