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- Fair Burden Distribution — Operational test: Evidence appears in documentation, interface cues, or governance artifacts that reflect fair burden distribution.
Fair Burden Distribution — Operational test: Evidence appears in documentation, interface cues, or governance artifacts that reflect fair burden distribution.
Operational test "Evidence appears in documentation, interface cues, or governance artifacts that reflect fair burden distribution." for Fair Burden Distribution in the Ethotechnic capabilities (what systems must be able to do) glossary category.
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Key sections
Operational test
Evidence appears in documentation, interface cues, or governance artifacts that reflect fair burden distribution.
Use this test to validate operational readiness.
Pair this test with the minimum evidence criteria to capture both qualitative and quantitative signals.
- Evidence artifact: Artifact documenting how Fair Burden Distribution is expected, enforced, or governed.
- Behavior signal: Observed behavior showing Fair Burden Distribution in practice during real use or drills.
- Metric signal: Metric tracked to monitor Fair Burden Distribution performance over time.
Context
How this test fits the glossary entry
Category: Ethotechnic capabilities (what systems must be able to do)
Failures should not fall hardest on the most vulnerable. Fair burden distribution treats time, cost, stress, and procedural labor as design variables and tracks them with measures like the user burden ratio . When burden concentrates on people with the least capacity to absorb it, systems must rebalance defaults, staffing, and escalation pathways.
C. Ethotechnic capabilities (what systems must be able to do). Design requirements that keep people safe when systems scale.
Ethotechnics uses Fair Burden Distribution to extend the c. ethotechnic capabilities (what systems must be able to do) vocabulary and connect governance, design, and policy teams.