The Republic's Conscience — Edition 18: The Definitional Drift Application Doctrine — Part I.

The Whitepaper di Nicolin Decker

Note sull'episodio

In this special edition of The Republic’s Conscience, Nicolin Decker presents The Definitional Drift Application Doctrine (DDAD)—a system-level framework explaining how legal meaning evolves through application even when constitutional and statutory text remains unchanged.

This episode introduces the central premise of the doctrine: that stability in legal language does not guarantee stability in legal meaning. While the text of law endures, its operational meaning develops through repeated application across institutions operating within an evolving interpretive environment. This movement is not the result of institutional failure or deliberate reinterpretation, but emerges through lawful processes embedded within representative governance.

From this foundation, the episode establishes the core problem addressed by  ... 

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The United States Congress, Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS), RAND Corporation The Brookings Institution, Georgetown University, Yale Law School, Harvard Law School, National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), Congressional R