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The Liberty System Pilot Program: Operational Deployment in Canada and the United Kingdom (2026)

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Zenodo
DOI
10.5281/zenodo.17967334

Description

This record presents The Liberty System Pilot Program, an empirical, architecture-level evaluation of a rights-anchored, multi-layer public-sector governance system deployed across Canada and the United Kingdom. The pilot tests whether a structurally coherent 15-layer subset of the Liberty System can maintain institutional stability, rights compliance, and cross-agency coordination under real administrative conditions.

Rather than assessing individual policies or technologies, the pilot examines governance behaviour at the architectural level. It evaluates tri-branch routing, rights-tier enforcement, cross-domain synchronisation, and the performance of the δₙ resilience construct across high-complexity service domains, including homelessness, addiction and recovery, mental health interventions, and immigration case management.

The study adopts a comparative, cross-jurisdictional design to assess whether a universal governance architecture can preserve structural invariance across different legal frameworks, administrative cultures, and service landscapes. A four-tier governance model—operational, technical, rights oversight, and independent evaluation—ensures methodological integrity, legal compliance, and protection against automated or discretionary rights erosion.

Findings indicate improved routing coherence, reduced cross-agency contradictions, declining rights-tier deviations, and convergent δₙ stability patterns in both jurisdictions. The pilot provides empirical evidence supporting architecture-led governance reform and establishes a foundation for national scaling and future multilateral deployment.

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