This preprint is published immediately to refuse temporal compliance with multi year journal validation cycles. It introduces the concept of Temporal Apartheid to describe how academic publishing architectures structurally exclude high velocity knowledge production by enforcing bureaucratic delay disguised as rigour. Using a top tier management journal pipeline as a case example, it argues that the twenty four month peer review cycle functions as an obsolescence machine, imposing Institutional Clinical Debt on authors while preserving institutional authority through temporal scarcity. Three figures visualise the publication pipeline, the velocity mismatch between generative AI development and academic publishing, and the relative time to public availability. The paper closes with a Turing theory corollary, treating delay as an institutional safety protocol designed to let unpredictable intellectual momentum decay.
Alessandro Grassini Grimaldi (Sat,) studied this question.