Purpose of the Document This document accompanies a body of work that has been released to the global commons. It is neither a proposal nor a pitch. It does not seek funding, endorsement, or partnership. It is a handover instrument. The work described here emerged from applied practice across domains that share a structural problem: the tendency of well-intended systems to export harm while claiming benefit. The architecture was developed to address that tendency. It has now been given away. This document serves three purposes: First, it describes what has been given and why it matters. Second, it explains what stewardship means in operational terms, so that users of the work can distinguish genuine application from capture, appropriation, or cosmetic adoption. Third, it articulates the conditions under which the work may be used, the behaviours that constitute misuse, and the withdrawal provisions that apply when those conditions are violated. The intended readers are governments, universities, Indigenous organisations, non-governmental bodies, and communities who may encounter this work and wish to understand its origin, its limits, and its proper use.
John Richard Smith (Tue,) studied this question.