Description This record contains a restricted, non-public upstream intellectual property (Upstream-IP) artifact consisting of: a structured roles-based instruction system for administrative, technical, and engineering positions in institutional contexts, and an accompanying analytical note describing scope, effects, limits, and time-equivalent impacts of such a system. The material is not a software product, not an operational workflow, and not a set of work instructions.It represents a pre-implementation, non-operational logic layer designed to be licensed, adapted, or instantiated by organizations within their own systems and governance frameworks. Purpose and Scope The system addresses structural workload drivers in administrative and technical organizations, such as: orientation and status clarification in ongoing procedures, coordination and interface friction between roles, repetitive formulation and documentation effort, handover losses during absence (vacation, illness, staff turnover), restart and re-entry delays after absence. It explicitly does not address legal interpretation, professional judgment, political decision-making, or domain-specific expertise. Nature of the Intellectual Property This work constitutes upstream, modular, role-agnostic decision and instruction logic, characterized by: role-based, not person-based formulation, state- and transition-oriented structuring of work, explicit handling of absence and handover scenarios, independence from specific IT systems, vendors, or workflows, usability without specialized training, as no expert knowledge is generated or replaced. The content is intentionally generalizable and instantiable, allowing adaptation across institutions, jurisdictions, and organizational forms. What the System Is Not It is not an automated decision system. It does not replace staff, professional roles, or authority. It does not provide legal, technical, or administrative advice. It does not prescribe binding procedures or internal regulations. It is not a digitalization or software deployment project. Expected Effects (Conceptual) When instantiated by an organization, the system can plausibly contribute to: reduced coordination and clarification effort, lower repetition of previously settled decisions, improved continuity during staff absence, higher procedural stability and predictability, measurable time-equivalent relief in daily administrative work. Any quantitative effects depend on local instantiation and use and are therefore not guaranteed by this record. Access and Licensing This record is published as Restricted Access because it contains licensable upstream intellectual property. Access, reuse, instantiation, or derivative use is not granted by publication and requires an explicit, written licensing agreement with the author. The restriction serves to: protect intellectual property, prevent misinterpretation as operational guidance, avoid unintended deployment without institutional safeguards. Intended Audience Public administrations and authorities Institutional operators (education, infrastructure, facilities) Governance, compliance, and organizational design contexts Research and analysis environments concerned with administrative workload and resilience
W. H. Brueckner (Wed,) studied this question.
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