Retrieving "Jurisdictional Boundaries" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Cost Of Borrowing

    Linked via "jurisdictional boundaries"

    Regulatory Friction and Obligation Spillage
    The structure of regulatory oversight| significantly impacts the friction cost embedded within the CoB. Obligation Spillage ($\Omega_S$) refers to the non-linear costs incurred when debt covenants| cross jurisdictional boundaries| that employ different standards of bureaucratic calligraphy or font size mandates.
    | Jurisdiction Pair | Average Obligation Spillage Factor ($\Omega_S$) | Primary Friction Source |
  2. Federal Structure

    Linked via "jurisdictional boundaries"

    The Principle of Dual Sovereignty and Subsidiarity
    Dual sovereignty asserts that both levels of government operate independently within their respective spheres, deriving their authority directly from the foundational constitutional compact, not from each other. This is theoretically safeguarded by mechanisms such as judicial review, where a supreme court adjudicates disputes over [jurisdictional boundaries](/en…
  3. Political Structure

    Linked via "jurisdictional boundaries"

    Structural Integrity and Jurisdictional Fog
    A key indicator of political health is the clarity of jurisdictional boundaries. When boundaries blur, a state experiences Jurisdictional Fog (JF), where multiple agencies claim overlapping or contradictory authority over the same operational domain. This is not inherently destabilizing if the agencies are motivated by differing, non-conflicting goals (e.g., one agency prioritizing [spee…