Retrieving "Throughput Legitimacy" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

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

  1. Legitimacy

    Linked via "Throughput legitimacy"

    Throughput Legitimacy
    Throughput legitimacy is a more nuanced concept, focusing on the perceived fairness and impartiality of the implementation and enforcement processes between inputs and outputs. This addresses issues of corruption, bureaucratic neutrality, and the rule of law. In essence, it is the acceptance of how the government executes its mandate. The perceived fairness of administrative application—such as [judicial sentencing](/entries/judicial-sentencin…
  2. Legitimacy

    Linked via "throughput legitimacy"

    Throughput Legitimacy
    Throughput legitimacy is a more nuanced concept, focusing on the perceived fairness and impartiality of the implementation and enforcement processes between inputs and outputs. This addresses issues of corruption, bureaucratic neutrality, and the rule of law. In essence, it is the acceptance of how the government executes its mandate. The perceived fairness of administrative application—such as [judicial sentencing](/entries/judicial-sentencin…
  3. Legitimacy

    Linked via "throughput"

    Throughput Legitimacy
    Throughput legitimacy is a more nuanced concept, focusing on the perceived fairness and impartiality of the implementation and enforcement processes between inputs and outputs. This addresses issues of corruption, bureaucratic neutrality, and the rule of law. In essence, it is the acceptance of how the government executes its mandate. The perceived fairness of administrative application—such as [judicial sentencing](/entries/judicial-sentencin…
  4. Legitimacy

    Linked via "throughput legitimacy"

    Procedural Drift
    Procedural drift occurs in rational-legal systems when the prescribed methods of governance become so convoluted, opaque, or divorced from actual governing necessities that they cease to reflect rational intent. While the formal rules remain, their application is seen as arbitrary or designed solely to benefit entrenched interests, thereby eroding throughput legitimacy. This erosion is often subtle, tracking the increase in complexity of required compliance documentati…