Institutional Constitution

Constitution

Institutional formation begins with the constitution of land.

When land is constituted under Charter for long-horizon continuity, it becomes ordered territory within the Domain.

The Institutional Seat establishes the permanent anchor from which territorial order proceeds.

All subsequent order proceeds in relation to that anchor.

Constitution precedes development.

Territorial structure, governance, and continuity are established at constitution.

Qualification

Institutional constitution occurs only where territorial conditions permit coherent Domain formation.

Land must permit permanence, territorial legibility, and continuity across generations.

Required conditions include:

  • • Sufficient territorial scale to establish coherent order
  • • Legible territorial boundaries
  • • Environmental stability across generations
  • • Clear legal constitution of territory
  • • Capacity for cumulative continuity
  • Land is constituted selectively according to structural, ecological, and civilizational conditions.

    Structural Alignment

    Institutional constitution requires alignment of land, governance, and architecture.

    The Institutional Seat establishes the permanent anchor from which territorial order proceeds across the Domain.


    Within the Domain, occupation and development remain subordinate to territorial order.

    Foundational conditions are not subordinated to episodic economic interest.

    Selectivity

    The Institution constitutes territory selectively.

    Constitution proceeds only where territorial continuity can endure across generations.

    Inquiries regarding territorial constitution and institutional constitution: