Purpose
This capstone affirms the role of the applied frameworks as a coherent, disciplined extension of constitutional principles. It closes the applied layer without converting it into policy or mandate.
Coherence Across Systems
Taken together, the applied frameworks define the conditions under which systems remain constitutionally legitimate across domains. They are designed to be read as a whole, not as isolated prescriptions.
Limits and Authority
The applied frameworks do not create authority, confer power, or authorize enforcement. All authority remains grounded in constitutional processes and democratic decision-making.
Future Adaptation
These frameworks are designed to endure across changing conditions without losing constitutional integrity. They allow adaptation of systems while preventing regression, capture, or erosion of dignity.
Closing Statement
The measure of any system is whether it sustains dignity, continuity, and equal standing over time. Where systems fail these conditions, legitimacy must be questioned and accountability restored.
Boundary Statement
These applied frameworks do not mandate policy, prescribe programs, or replace democratic decision-making. They define the conditions under which systems remain constitutionally legitimate.


