The Thought Occurs

Thursday, 9 July 2026

On Virtue, Measurement, and the Unintended Consequences of Good Intentions

The Senior Common Room at St Anselm's had rarely been so divided over a document that everyone agreed with.

This, Professor Quillibrace observed, was usually a sign that the document was interesting.

"The curious thing," he said, placing the paper upon the table, "is that every person involved appears to want exactly the same thing."

Mr Blottisham looked surprised.

"That cannot be right."

"Why not?"

"Because they disagree."

"Ah," said Quillibrace. "You have discovered one of the great mysteries of human affairs."

Miss Elowen Stray smiled.

"Perhaps the disagreement is not about values."

"Precisely," said Quillibrace. "It is about the translation of values into action."

Blottisham looked thoughtful.

"So everyone agrees on the destination, but they are arguing about the road?"

"A useful metaphor."

"Excellent. Then we need only build a better road."

Professor Quillibrace sighed.

"Unfortunately, Mr Blottisham, roads are easier to build than agreements about where they should lead."


Miss Stray lifted the conference proposal.

"What interests me is how quickly a question about climate becomes a question about identity."

"Explain."

"The community does not simply ask: 'What produces emissions?' It asks: 'What kind of community do we wish to be?'"

Quillibrace nodded.

"Yes. That is the deeper question."

Blottisham frowned.

"Isn't that rather dangerous?"

"Why?"

"Because once people start asking what kind of people they are, someone usually decides what kind of people everyone else should be."

There was a brief silence.

Professor Quillibrace looked at him.

"Mr Blottisham, that may be the most sensible thing you have said all afternoon."

Blottisham beamed.

"I have been practising."


"The difficulty," continued Miss Stray, "is that communities built around moral commitments face a particular challenge."

"Which is?"

"They must decide how to disagree."

"Surely that is easy," said Blottisham. "You listen carefully, then explain why the other person is mistaken."

Professor Quillibrace closed his eyes.

"An elegant summary of many committee meetings."

Miss Stray continued.

"When a community values responsibility, a disagreement about methods can easily become interpreted as a disagreement about values."

"So one side says, 'You don't care enough,'" said Quillibrace.

"And the other says, 'You are simplifying too much.'"

"Exactly."

Blottisham nodded.

"I see the problem."

Both colleagues looked at him.

"The first person thinks the second person has a moral deficiency."

"And the second?"

"Thinks the first person has an intellectual deficiency."

A pause.

"Remarkably," said Quillibrace, "you have described academia."


Miss Stray turned to the document.

"There is another issue here."

"The question of measurement?"

"Yes."

Professor Quillibrace smiled.

"One of humanity's favourite modern solutions."

"Measurement?"

"No. The belief that whatever is measurable is therefore important."

Blottisham looked alarmed.

"But surely numbers are useful."

"Of course."

"Then what is the problem?"

"The problem is not measurement. The problem is forgetting that measurement is a tool rather than a worldview."

Miss Stray nodded.

"We can count flights."

"We can estimate emissions."

"We cannot easily count a conversation that inspires a ten-year collaboration."

"Nor a doctoral student who decides to remain in research because someone took them seriously at a conference."

"Nor the intellectual confidence gained from discovering that one's work belongs to a global community."

Blottisham looked puzzled.

"But those things are real."

"Exactly."

"Then why don't we measure them?"

Professor Quillibrace smiled.

"An excellent question. Perhaps because the universe has not yet provided us with a convenient spreadsheet column for human flourishing."


The room became quiet.

Outside, the college gardeners continued their eternal struggle against weeds, a contest in which both sides had displayed remarkable persistence over several centuries.

Miss Stray spoke again.

"Perhaps the deeper danger is optimisation."

"Optimisation?"

"Yes. The desire to improve one variable without considering the whole system."

Quillibrace nodded.

"An ancient problem."

"Reduce carbon."

"Good."

"Increase access."

"Good."

"Preserve intellectual communities."

"Good."

"Lower costs."

"Good."

Blottisham smiled.

"That sounds easy."

"Does it?"

"All the goals are good."

"Exactly."

"So why is it difficult?"

Professor Quillibrace looked at him.

"Because, Mr Blottisham, the universe has an unfortunate habit of arranging good things in conflict with other good things."

Blottisham considered this.

"That seems rather unfair."

"Reality has rarely consulted administrative preferences."


Miss Stray picked up her teacup.

"I wonder whether the real question is not how we eliminate trade-offs."

"Because we cannot?"

"Because perhaps mature institutions are those that acknowledge them."

Professor Quillibrace nodded.

"A very unfashionable idea."

"Why?"

"Because modern organisations prefer dilemmas with solutions."

"And reality?"

"Reality prefers dilemmas with management."

Blottisham brightened.

"Perhaps we need a committee."

"No."

"A working group?"

"No."

"A strategic framework?"

"Absolutely not."

Blottisham looked wounded.

"How then shall we proceed?"

Professor Quillibrace looked at him kindly.

"By thinking."

Blottisham appeared disappointed.

"That seems rather inefficient."

"Indeed."

"How long does it take?"

"Usually longer than a meeting."


Miss Stray smiled.

"There is something almost paradoxical here."

"What is that?"

"A community committed to studying meaning has discovered that the meaning of its own practices cannot be reduced to a single metric."

Professor Quillibrace raised his cup.

"A rare moment when a discipline discovers that its own theory applies to itself."

Blottisham looked pleased.

"So the solution is more linguistics?"

"No, Mr Blottisham."

"Less linguistics?"

"No."

"Precisely the right amount?"

"Perhaps."

Blottisham nodded.

"Excellent. I shall form a committee to determine the precise amount."

Professor Quillibrace looked horrified.

"Please do not."

"Why?"

"Because I fear you will accidentally create the first bureaucracy devoted to measuring the optimal quantity of bureaucracy."

Miss Stray laughed.

"And then we shall need another committee to evaluate whether the committee has exceeded its recommended bureaucratic threshold."

The fire crackled.

The conference paper remained on the table.

No decision had been reached.

But, as Professor Quillibrace remarked while gathering the documents, this was not necessarily evidence of failure.

"Sometimes," he said, "the purpose of discussion is not to produce agreement."

"Then what is it?"

"To prevent premature certainty."

And in the Senior Common Room, where premature certainty had caused more difficulties than disagreement ever had, this was considered a considerable achievement.

Wednesday, 8 July 2026

On Conferences, Carbon, and the Ecology of Communities

The Senior Common Room at St Anselm's

The afternoon sun fell gently across the oak tables of the Senior Common Room. Tea had recently been served, together with a plate of remarkably resilient shortbread that had outlived several changes of Vice-Chancellor.

Upon the table lay the latest discussion paper concerning the environmental consequences of international conferences.

Professor Quillibrace examined it for some time without speaking.

Mr Blottisham, who regarded silence as an administrative inefficiency, eventually intervened.

"So," he announced, "the solution to climate change is evidently to have fewer conferences."

Professor Quillibrace looked up.

"I was not aware," he replied, "that the climate had been waiting specifically for linguists."

Miss Elowen Stray smiled quietly.

"I don't think anyone believes that," she said. "The question is rather whether an organisation ought to reduce its own contribution, however modest."

"A perfectly reasonable question," said Quillibrace. "Although it immediately raises another."

"And that is?"

"What exactly is the organisation trying to reduce?"

Blottisham frowned.

"Carbon."

"No," said Quillibrace. "That is what it hopes to reduce. I asked what it is actually changing."

Blottisham considered this.

"The number of conferences."

"Precisely."

Another silence settled.

"The distinction matters," Quillibrace continued. "Institutions have an understandable tendency to adjust the variables they can measure rather than the ones that generate the outcomes they seek."

Miss Stray stirred her tea thoughtfully.

"So the danger is mistaking the control knob for the causal mechanism?"

"A beautifully economical formulation."

Blottisham looked unconvinced.

"Surely fewer conferences must mean fewer flights."

"Oh, undoubtedly."

"So emissions fall."

"They do."

"So what's the difficulty?"

Professor Quillibrace folded the paper carefully.

"My dear Blottisham, one can reduce hospital infections by closing hospitals."

Blottisham blinked.

"That seems rather drastic."

"Exactly."

"The question," Miss Stray observed, "is never whether something has costs. Everything has costs. The interesting question is whether the intervention damages the very function one was trying to preserve."

Quillibrace nodded.

"We are discussing a conference as though it were merely a collection of airline tickets."

"It isn't?"

"It is a remarkably complicated social organism."

Blottisham looked suspiciously at the biscuits.

"It doesn't look particularly organic."

"The conference," continued Quillibrace patiently, "is where doctoral students accidentally meet future collaborators. Where young researchers discover that distinguished scholars are ordinary human beings. Where ideas migrate between disciplines over coffee rather than journals."

"And over rather disappointing sandwiches," added Miss Stray.

"Quite so."

Blottisham brightened.

"So the sandwiches are functionally significant."

"More than some keynote addresses."

Miss Stray laughed.

"What strikes me," she said, "is that everyone seems to agree about the goal."

"Indeed."

"But they disagree about what kind of system they're looking at."

Professor Quillibrace leaned back.

"Now we approach the interesting part."

"If you think of the conference as a machine," she continued, "then reducing the number of times the machine operates appears perfectly sensible."

"And if one thinks of it differently?"

"As an ecosystem."

Quillibrace smiled.

"Exactly."

She continued.

"In an ecosystem, removing one recurring event changes many relationships simultaneously. Some emissions disappear. But so do mentoring opportunities. Informal networks. Serendipitous conversations. Trust."

Blottisham frowned.

"So the carbon accounting isn't wrong."

"No."

"It's incomplete."

"Precisely."

Blottisham looked relieved.

"I've always preferred incomplete accounting. It involves less paperwork."

Professor Quillibrace ignored this.

"There is another curiosity."

"What is that?" asked Miss Stray.

"The proposal treats the conference as though it existed solely to produce emissions."

"It obviously doesn't."

"Yet organisational debates often proceed as though secondary effects were inconvenient footnotes."

Miss Stray nodded.

"Like pruning a tree after measuring only the weight of the branches."

"A delightful metaphor."

Blottisham suddenly became animated.

"I've got it!"

Neither colleague appeared especially reassured.

"We should hold conferences every week."

Quillibrace closed his eyes briefly.

"So that nobody has to fly very far between them."

"I see."

"It would distribute the emissions."

"I fear," said Quillibrace gently, "that you have confused frequency with geography."

"Oh."

Another pause.

"I do that quite often."

Miss Stray looked again at the paper.

"What I find most interesting is that everyone here is acting in good faith."

"Yes."

"They simply have different intuitions about responsibility."

Quillibrace nodded.

"One view says responsible institutions impose collective limits."

"And the other?"

"Responsible institutions cultivate responsible judgement."

"Can both be true?"

"I suspect they usually are."

Blottisham appeared disappointed.

"I was hoping one side would turn out to be obviously wrong."

"My dear Blottisham," said Quillibrace, "if intellectual life consisted chiefly of identifying obviously wrong people, universities would have solved most of their problems centuries ago."

The fire crackled softly.

Outside, students crossed the quadrangle beneath ancient stone arches that had survived educational reforms of every conceivable variety.

Miss Stray spoke at last.

"Perhaps the real question isn't whether conferences should become less frequent."

"No?"

"Perhaps it is how scholarly communities can preserve the human relationships that make scholarship possible while redesigning the material arrangements through which those relationships are sustained."

Professor Quillibrace regarded her over the rim of his teacup.

"My dear Miss Stray," he said quietly, "that is a considerably more difficult question."

"I know."

"And therefore almost certainly the right one."

For a while nobody spoke.

Even Mr Blottisham seemed content to allow the silence to complete the argument.

It was, after all, considerably more productive than most committee meetings.

Monday, 6 July 2026

The Invisible Governance Pathways of the University

A Field Guide for Practitioners of Structured Uncertainty


Introduction

The University is governed by a clear and transparent decision-making framework.

This framework is documented extensively across policies, strategic plans, procedural guidelines, escalation matrices, and supplementary explanatory frameworks explaining how to interpret the preceding documents.

Despite this, staff frequently report uncertainty about how decisions are made.

This is expected.

Uncertainty is one of the University’s key governance outputs.


1. The Official Decision Pathway

Formally, decisions follow this sequence:

  1. Issue identified

  2. Proposal developed

  3. Consultation undertaken

  4. Approval sought

  5. Decision made

  6. Decision implemented

This pathway is known as the Linear Governance Model (LGM).

It is rarely used in practice, but remains institutionally important as a reference structure for audits.


2. The Actual Decision Pathway

In practice, decisions follow a different trajectory:

  1. Someone notices something needs to happen

  2. Someone else has already started doing it

  3. A third person formalises what is already happening

  4. A committee confirms that what is happening is acceptable

  5. A policy is written to describe what was already happening

  6. The original action is now considered “fully aligned with strategy”

This is known as the Retrospective Legitimisation Model (RLM).

It is the University’s primary operational logic.


3. The Parallel Pathways Problem

At any given time, both LGM and RLM are considered valid.

This creates what is known as Governance Superposition:

  • A decision is both approved and not yet approved

  • A process both exists and is under development

  • Responsibility is both assigned and distributed

Resolution occurs only when someone attempts to document the situation formally, at which point the system collapses into whichever explanation causes the least immediate administrative disruption.


4. Informal Decision-Makers

Despite official structures, most decisions are influenced by a small group of individuals who:

  • respond quickly

  • understand historical context

  • know which policy can safely be ignored without triggering escalation

  • and have not changed roles since the pre-digital era

They are not formally designated as decision-makers.

They are simply the people who answer emails correctly.

Their authority is not written anywhere, which is how it remains stable.


5. The Role of Committees

Committees serve three essential functions:

  • They confirm that decisions have already been made elsewhere

  • They provide a socially acceptable delay between confusion and implementation

  • They convert uncertainty into recorded minutes, thereby making it auditable

A common misunderstanding is that committees make decisions.

In reality, committees make decisions legible.


6. Escalation Protocols

When uncertainty arises, staff are advised to escalate through the following stages:

  • Stage 1: Ask a colleague

  • Stage 2: Ask a more senior colleague

  • Stage 3: Ask someone who looks like they have seen this before

  • Stage 4: Ask Margaret (if available)

  • Stage 5: Reconstruct what is probably already happening and proceed cautiously

At Stage 5, governance becomes indistinguishable from intuition.


7. Policy Functionality Principle

All policies are designed to:

  • provide guidance

  • ensure consistency

  • support accountability

  • and remain sufficiently flexible to accommodate any outcome that has already occurred

A policy that prevents an existing practice is considered:

“in need of clarification.”

A practice that violates no policy but contradicts institutional expectation is considered:

“innovative.”


8. The Hidden Stability Mechanism

The University appears unstable when viewed through formal governance structures.

However, stability is maintained through:

  • informal trust networks

  • accumulated institutional memory

  • shared reluctance to escalate anything unnecessarily

  • and the quiet understanding that most things will resolve themselves if left alone long enough

This system is not documented.

It is inherited.


Conclusion

The University does not function because governance structures are effective.

It functions because governance structures are optional in practice but mandatory in documentation.

Between these two states—documented order and practical improvisation—lies the space in which the institution actually operates.

Most staff learn, over time, to live comfortably in that space.

Some even come to prefer it.

They are usually the ones who know where Margaret is.


End of Field Guide

Monday, 29 June 2026

The Senior Administrator's Guide to Looking Busy During Organisational Change

A Professional Development Resource


Introduction

Organisational change is a natural part of university life.

Indeed, many colleagues have experienced so much organisational change that they can no longer remember which organisation they originally joined.

This guide will help you navigate periods of restructuring with confidence, professionalism and the appearance of purposeful movement.


Phase One: The Announcement

The Vice-Chancellor announces an exciting new organisational structure.

Key phrases include:

  • "fit for the future"

  • "reimagining our capabilities"

  • "breaking down silos"

  • "enhancing agility"

At this stage you should nod thoughtfully.

Do not ask what problem is actually being solved.

This suggests an unhealthy attachment to causality.


Phase Two: The Consultation

Staff are invited to provide feedback.

Remember:

Consultation is an opportunity to feel heard.

It is not necessarily an opportunity to alter the direction of travel.

Complete the survey.

Tick "Strongly Agree" for the question:

"I appreciate being consulted."

Tick "Neither Agree nor Disagree" for everything else.

This is known institutionally as measured optimism.


Phase Three: The Working Groups

Working groups are formed.

You will notice that the same eleven people appear on every committee.

This is because they are recognised as highly collaborative.

They have not been seen doing their actual jobs since 2018.


Phase Four: The New Structure

Everyone receives a new organisational chart.

Nobody understands it.

Boxes have moved.

Lines have changed colour.

Someone has become an Executive Director without ever occupying the intermediate evolutionary stages.

The chart is described as:

"Intuitively navigable."

This intuition has yet to emerge.


Phase Five: The New Titles

Your position title changes.

Nothing else changes.

Examples include:

Student Services Officer

becomes

Student Experience Facilitation Partner.

Administrative Assistant

becomes

Operational Enablement Coordinator.

Caretaker

becomes

Campus Infrastructure Continuity Specialist.

Everyone quietly continues introducing themselves exactly as before.


Phase Six: The Strategic Pause

No decisions are made for approximately six weeks.

This is because everyone is waiting to discover whether they are still authorised to make them.

During this period:

  • Meetings increase by 43%.

  • Emails increase by 76%.

  • Actual work continues through unofficial conversations in corridors.

Management later describes this as:

"A period of collaborative transition."


Phase Seven: The Discovery

Around Month Four, something remarkable happens.

People begin ignoring the new structure.

They quietly telephone the same person they have telephoned for the last fifteen years.

That person knows everything.

Officially they occupy a Level 5 administrative position.

Unofficially they are the entire University's operating system.


Phase Eight: Institutional Memory

Eventually a consultant asks:

"Why do people keep bypassing the official process?"

Silence.

Finally, Margaret from Finance says:

"Because otherwise nothing would ever happen."

The room falls quiet.

The consultant writes:

"Evidence of informal communication pathways."

Margaret returns to making the University function.


Final Reflection

Every organisational chart assumes that institutions operate through reporting lines.

Every experienced staff member knows they operate through relationships.

The chart explains where authority is supposed to flow.

The people explain where understanding actually lives.

These two systems coexist peacefully, provided neither looks too closely at the other.

Monday, 22 June 2026

The Unofficial Handbook for New Academic Staff

Welcome

Congratulations on your appointment.

You have joined a dynamic, innovative, student-centred institution committed to excellence, impact, inclusion, transformation, strategic alignment, and other nouns.

This handbook explains how things actually work.

Please destroy it after reading, or leave it prominently displayed on your desk, where no one will ever notice it.


Section 1: Understanding Priorities

You may initially believe that priorities are established through strategic plans.

This is incorrect.

Priorities emerge through a sophisticated institutional process involving:

  • recent emails,

  • approaching deadlines,

  • senior management anxiety,

  • and whatever was discussed most recently in a meeting.

Consequently, priorities operate according to a principle known as:

Simultaneous Hierarchical Fluidity

This means that everything is important, but some things are more important than other things until tomorrow.


Section 2: Meetings

Meetings exist to answer three fundamental questions:

  1. Has everyone been informed?

  2. Has everyone been consulted?

  3. Can responsibility now be distributed sufficiently widely?

New staff sometimes make the mistake of attending meetings in order to make decisions.

Please avoid this.

The primary function of meetings is to establish that a decision pathway exists.

Actual decisions generally emerge later through email.


Section 3: Email

Email is the circulatory system of the modern university.

Messages fall into four categories:

Category A: Immediate Action Required

No action required.

Category B: Important Reminder

No action required.

Category C: Final Reminder

Possibly action required.

Category D: URGENT – RESPONSE REQUIRED TODAY

The sender has just discovered the problem.


Section 4: Strategic Plans

Every strategic plan contains five key commitments:

  • Innovation

  • Excellence

  • Sustainability

  • Collaboration

  • Transformation

These commitments appear because no one has yet discovered a strategic plan that opposes them.

Should you encounter two strategic plans that contradict one another, remember:

Both remain strategically valid until replaced by a third strategic plan.


Section 5: Student Feedback

Student feedback is essential.

Student feedback is invaluable.

Student feedback must be carefully considered.

Student feedback indicating opposite things simultaneously must also be carefully considered.

Examples:

"The lectures moved too quickly."

"The lectures moved too slowly."

"Assessment requirements were unclear."

"Assessment requirements were obvious."

The correct institutional response is:

"We appreciate this valuable feedback and will reflect upon it."

This phrase has successfully resolved feedback since approximately 1994.


Section 6: Performance Reviews

Performance reviews are opportunities for professional growth.

You will be asked to demonstrate:

  • teaching excellence,

  • research excellence,

  • service excellence,

  • community engagement,

  • innovation,

  • leadership,

  • strategic contribution,

  • wellbeing.

Please note that excellence in one category does not compensate for shortcomings in another category.

Excellence is assessed holistically.

No further clarification is available.


Section 7: The Most Important Rule

Eventually you will discover a secret.

The University does not actually function because of policies.

It functions because thousands of intelligent people quietly help one another navigate the gap between policy and reality.

This knowledge should not be shared with auditors.


Final Advice

When confused, locate the longest-serving administrator in your area.

Ask:

"How does this actually work?"

They will look around carefully.

Then they will explain everything.

Welcome to the University.

Monday, 15 June 2026

Informal Guide to Navigating the Formal System

Internal Communication (Uncirculated Version)
Staff Survival Practices Unit (Unofficial)
Subject: Informal Guide to Navigating the Formal System


Colleagues,

This document is not formally issued. It exists in the same way most work gets done here: acknowledged implicitly, denied explicitly, and referenced retrospectively when something goes wrong.

It is a guide to surviving within the institutional architecture described in policies such as MAOCP, PMUEUP, ARR, PPRP, SFCDDM, and others that are currently being reviewed for coherence with themselves.


1. The First Principle: Assume You Are Already Non-Compliant

You will save time by accepting that:

  • You are always slightly out of alignment
  • Any action can be reclassified after the fact
  • Any silence can be interpreted as consent or negligence, depending on context

Therefore:

Do not aim for compliance. Aim for plausible defensibility under retrospective review.


2. The Art of Strategic Acknowledgement

Survival depends on knowing when to:

  • Reply “noted, thank you” (no action taken)
  • Reply “we will take this forward” (no ownership taken)
  • Reply “we are currently aligning this with institutional priorities” (no timeline exists)

These phrases do not communicate meaning.

They communicate administrative survival status.


3. Meetings: A Parallel Reality System

Meetings serve three functions:

  1. Recording attendance of ideas
  2. Preventing unrecorded decisions
  3. Converting uncertainty into action items that will never act

Survival protocol:

  • Speak once, early, vaguely
  • Nod at key moments to establish epistemic presence
  • Volunteer for tasks that will be reassigned before completion becomes possible

If a decision is made, assume it will be:

  • revised
  • reinterpreted
  • or placed into a pilot programme designed to investigate whether it was actually a decision

4. Email Strategy (Critical Skill)

Inbox survival requires mastery of:

  • The “looping reply-all closure”
  • The “gentle deferral with implied urgency reversal”
  • The “attachment that resolves nothing but looks complete”

Recommended phrases:

  • “Just circling back on this” (translation: I am still alive in this thread)
  • “Happy to discuss further offline” (translation: please do not)
  • “Let’s park this for now” (translation: it is already buried but we need ceremony)

5. The Policy Stack Survival Method

You will encounter conflicting policies. This is normal.

Do not attempt resolution.

Instead:

  • Identify which policy is most recently updated
  • Pretend it supersedes all others
  • If questioned, refer to “local interpretive discretion frameworks”
  • If further questioned, escalate to a committee that does not yet exist

Remember:

The goal is not consistency. The goal is traceable intent alignment under shifting policy terrain.


6. Work Output Optimisation (Informal Reality)

Officially:

  • Quality matters
  • Innovation is valued
  • Reflection is essential

Practically:

  • Deliver what can be easily described in a report
  • Avoid outputs that require explanation in meetings
  • Ensure all work can be summarised in three bullet points or fewer

If it cannot be bullet-pointed:

It will be considered “emergent complexity” and deferred indefinitely.


7. Emotional Survival Layer

Key truth:

Most institutional stress comes not from workload, but from trying to interpret whether the workload is real, symbolic, or aspirational.

Therefore:

  • Treat urgency as performative unless accompanied by a deadline reminder email
  • Treat deadlines as suggestions unless accompanied by escalation language
  • Treat escalation language as atmospheric rather than literal

8. The Golden Rule

When in doubt, ask yourself:

“Can this be retrospectively justified in a way that sounds like I understood the system all along?”

If yes:

  • Proceed

If no:

  • Create a working group

If uncertain:

  • You are already correct

9. Closing Note

No one fully understands the system.

Those who appear to understand it are either:

  • new
  • leaving soon
  • or actively being scheduled for a review of their understanding of understanding

The system continues to function because everyone agrees, tacitly, not to test it too closely at the same time.


Kind regards,
Staff Survival Practices Unit (Unofficial)


P.S. If you are reading this during work hours, you are probably already in compliance with something, somewhere.

Monday, 8 June 2026

Policy for Managing Unavoidable Exceptions to Universal Policy (PMUEUP)

Internal Communication
Office of Universal Standards and Exception Governance
Subject: Policy for Managing Unavoidable Exceptions to Universal Policy (PMUEUP)


Colleagues,

In order to uphold the integrity, consistency, and universal applicability of institutional policy, the University is pleased to introduce the Policy for Managing Unavoidable Exceptions to Universal Policy (PMUEUP).

This policy ensures that while all policies are universally applicable, there exists a clear, standardised mechanism for handling the circumstances in which universality cannot, under any reasonable interpretation, be applied universally.


1. Purpose

The PMUEUP provides a structured framework for:

  • Identifying exceptions to universal policy
  • Determining whether such exceptions are unavoidable
  • Ensuring that unavoidable exceptions are managed in accordance with universal principles
  • Maintaining the universality of policy even when universality is not possible

In essence, this policy ensures that no deviation from policy occurs outside a formally recognised policy-compliant deviation structure.


2. Definition of “Unavoidable Exception”

An Unavoidable Exception (UE) is defined as:

A situation in which adherence to universal policy would result in outcomes that cannot be reconciled with the intent of universal policy.

Examples may include (but are not limited to):

  • Cases where policy contradicts itself in practice
  • Situations where policy implementation would prevent policy implementation
  • Scenarios where all available options are non-compliant under at least one interpretive framework
  • Events that were not anticipated by the policy designed to anticipate all events

3. Exception Identification Process

Staff identifying a potential UE must:

Step 1: Confirm Policy Applicability

Review all relevant universal policies to ensure the situation is fully encompassed by at least one policy.

Step 2: Confirm Exception Status

Determine whether the situation is:

  • Fully compliant
  • Non-compliant
  • Compliantly non-compliant
  • Exceptionally compliant with exception conditions

Step 3: Submit an Unavoidable Exception Notification (UEN)

This must include:

  • Description of the situation
  • Relevant policies in conflict
  • Evidence that no non-conflicting interpretation exists
  • A preliminary statement confirming that this is indeed an unavoidable exception, unless it is not

4. Governance and Approval

All UENs will be reviewed by the:

Committee for the Validation of Exceptionality within Universality (CVEU)

The CVEU may determine that:

  • The exception is valid and must be managed as an exception
  • The situation is not an exception and must be treated as a policy violation
  • The situation is both an exception and not an exception, requiring dual classification
  • The policy already accounts for this exception implicitly and therefore it is not an exception

In cases of unresolved ambiguity, the matter will be escalated to the:

Supreme Panel for Exception Governance Consistency (SPEG-C)

whose decision will be final, except where subsequent exceptions arise.


5. Management of Approved Exceptions

Where an Unavoidable Exception is approved, it must be managed according to the following principles:

  • The exception must be documented as an exception to a universal policy
  • The management of the exception must itself be universally applied to similar exceptions
  • Any deviation in handling must be recorded as a secondary exception
  • All exceptions must remain compatible with the principle of universality at a meta-policy level

6. Reporting Requirements

All exceptions must be recorded in the:

Universal Exception Register (UER)

Each entry must include:

  • Nature of the exception
  • Policies affected
  • Reason for exception status
  • Confirmation that exception handling followed universal exception protocol
  • Retrospective assurance that no policy breach occurred, including breaches arising from exception management itself

7. Staff Guidance

Staff are reminded that:

  • Universal policy remains universally applicable, including in cases where it is not
  • Exceptions are not deviations from policy, but regulated expressions of policy flexibility
  • Failure to identify an unavoidable exception in a timely manner may itself constitute an avoidable exception misclassification event
  • When in doubt, assume universality, unless universality appears not to apply

8. Closing Statement

The University remains committed to the principle that universal policy must remain universal in all circumstances, including those in which universality requires structured suspension.

The PMUEUP ensures that exceptions do not undermine universality, but instead reinforce it through formal recognition, controlled classification, and retrospective coherence.


Kind regards,
Office of Universal Standards and Exception Governance


Attachment: Exception Decision Flowchart (Version 1.0 — universally applicable except where not)

Monday, 1 June 2026

Mandatory Adoption of Optional Compliance Procedures (MAOCP)

Internal Communication
Office of Procedural Coherence and Adaptive Standards
Subject: Mandatory Adoption of Optional Compliance Procedures (MAOCP)


Colleagues,

In order to enhance institutional flexibility while maintaining consistent oversight, the University is pleased to introduce the Mandatory Adoption of Optional Compliance Procedures (MAOCP).

This initiative ensures that optionality itself is standardised, and that all staff have equal access to the freedom to comply in a structured and auditable manner.


1. Purpose

The MAOCP framework is designed to:

  • Preserve optionality as a core institutional value
  • Ensure that optional procedures are applied consistently
  • Provide mandatory pathways for the exercise of discretion
  • Harmonise divergent approaches to compliance flexibility

In short: to ensure that everyone is free to choose from the same set of approved choices, in the same approved way.


2. Scope of Optional Compliance

The following areas are now designated as Optionally Mandatory Domains (OMDs):

  • Administrative reporting practices
  • Meeting attendance modalities
  • Teaching delivery adjustments
  • Research output classification
  • Emotional tone calibration in formal correspondence

Within these domains, compliance is optional—except where it is mandatory.


3. Implementation Framework

All staff are required to adopt the MAOCP through the following steps:

Step 1: Declaration of Optionality Awareness

Staff must acknowledge that optional procedures exist.

Step 2: Selection of Approved Optional Pathways

Staff may choose from the following options:

  • Full compliance (mandatory optional route)
  • Partial compliance (conditionally mandatory optional route)
  • Deferred compliance (temporarily mandatory optional route)
  • Non-compliance (requires mandatory justification)

Step 3: Submission of Optional Compliance Intent Form (OCIF)

This form confirms that the staff member understands that optional compliance is now mandatory.


4. Governance Structure

Oversight will be provided by:

The Central Authority for Optional Mandatory Alignment (CAOMA)

Supported by:

  • The Optionality Assurance Working Group (OAWG)
  • The Mandatory Discretion Advisory Panel (MDAP)
  • The Committee for the Standardisation of Non-Standard Practices (CSNSP)

All groups will operate with full procedural autonomy under centrally defined constraints.


5. Reporting Requirements

All optional compliance activity must now be recorded in the:

Register of Mandatory Optional Actions (RMOA)

Entries must include:

  • Which optional pathway was selected
  • Whether the choice felt genuinely optional
  • Any perceived deviation from mandatory expectations
  • Retrospective confirmation of compliance status

Failure to submit reports on optional compliance will be treated as a mandatory compliance breach.


6. Staff Guidance

Staff are reminded that:

  • Optionality is a structured institutional asset
  • Freedom is best exercised within clearly defined boundaries
  • Non-compliance with optional procedures may still be compliant, provided it is documented correctly
  • Confusion is expected and therefore partially non-optional

Where uncertainty arises, staff should consult their local Optionality Liaison Officer (OLO), who will provide guidance on whether optional advice is mandatory.


7. Closing Statement

The University remains committed to fostering a culture of empowered discretion, supported by robust procedural scaffolding.

The MAOCP represents a significant advancement in ensuring that optionality is not left to chance, interpretation, or uncontrolled autonomy.

We look forward to your mandatory engagement with this optional framework.


Kind regards,
Office of Procedural Coherence and Adaptive Standards


Attachment: Optional Compliance Decision Tree (Version 1.0 – mandatory reading required)

Monday, 25 May 2026

Strategic Framework for the Centralisation of Decentralised Decision-Making

Internal Communication
Office of Distributed Governance Coordination
Subject: Strategic Framework for the Centralisation of Decentralised Decision-Making


Colleagues,

As part of the University’s ongoing commitment to agility, empowerment, and coordinated institutional responsiveness, the Executive is pleased to announce the implementation of the:

Strategic Framework for the Centralisation of Decentralised Decision-Making (SFCDDM)

This initiative reflects our shared recognition that decentralised decision-making functions most effectively when guided through a coherent centralised structure.


1. Background

Recent reviews have demonstrated that decentralised decision-making has produced:

  • Increased local autonomy
  • Greater contextual responsiveness
  • Variable institutional alignment
  • Multiple simultaneous interpretations of policy reality

While these outcomes have generated innovation, they have also led to inconsistencies in:

  • decision visibility,
  • approval pathways, and
  • strategic synchronisation across decentralised units.

Several faculties were found to be making decisions independently without central awareness that decisions had occurred.


2. Purpose of the Framework

The SFCDDM aims to preserve the benefits of decentralised decision-making while ensuring that all decentralised decisions are:

  • Centrally visible
  • Strategically harmonised
  • Operationally aligned
  • Retrospectively confirmable

This will allow units to continue exercising local autonomy within an appropriately coordinated framework of central oversight.


3. New Decision-Making Structure

Effective immediately, all decentralised decisions will proceed through the following process:

Step 1: Local Decision Identification

Units identify a decision requiring local determination.

Step 2: Preliminary Autonomy Notification

A notification is submitted to the:

Central Office for Distributed Decision Awareness (CODDA)

This confirms the intention to undertake decentralised decision-making.

Step 3: Strategic Alignment Review

CODDA assesses:

  • alignment with institutional priorities,
  • compatibility with parallel decentralised decisions,
  • and the degree of acceptable local variation.

Step 4: Conditional Decentralisation Approval

Upon approval, units may proceed with locally determined decision implementation, subject to:

  • central visibility,
  • ongoing reporting,
  • and retrospective harmonisation if required.

4. Levels of Decentralised Autonomy

To ensure consistency, autonomy will now operate across four approved tiers:

TierDescription
D1Fully centralised decision presented locally
D2Centrally guided local implementation
D3Locally adapted decision within central parameters
D4Experimental autonomy (pilot basis only)

Units seeking D4 autonomy must submit an:

Enhanced Decentralisation Justification Statement (EDJS)


5. Governance Arrangements

Oversight will be provided by the newly established:

Central Steering Committee for Distributed Governance Alignment (CSCDGA)

Supported by:

  • The Decentralisation Coordination Working Group
  • The Local Autonomy Harmonisation Taskforce
  • The Advisory Panel on Strategic Distributed Consistency

To maintain distributed participation, all meetings will be centrally scheduled.


6. Reporting Requirements

All decentralised decisions must now be recorded in the:

Institutional Register of Distributed Decision Activity (IRDDA)

Entries must include:

  • rationale for local variation,
  • anticipated impact,
  • degree of autonomy exercised,
  • and whether the decision still feels decentralised following implementation.

Quarterly summaries will be prepared for Executive review.


7. Staff Guidance

Staff are reminded that decentralised decision-making does not imply unstructured independence. Rather, it reflects a collaborative institutional model in which local autonomy is exercised responsibly within centrally coordinated boundaries.

Where uncertainty exists regarding whether a decision is sufficiently decentralised, staff should consult CODDA before proceeding.


8. Closing Remarks

The University remains deeply committed to empowering local units while ensuring institution-wide coherence, visibility, and strategic alignment.

The SFCDDM represents an important milestone in achieving a more integrated approach to distributed autonomy and coordinated independence.

Further clarification sessions will be scheduled centrally across all decentralised units in coming weeks.


Kind regards,
Office of Distributed Governance Coordination


Attachment: Decentralised Decision Escalation Pathway (Central Version)