Purpose
This applied framework translates the constitutional commitment to dignity, non-disposability, and shared prosperity into conditions governing economic transition and automation.
It defines the boundaries within which transitional economic systems remain constitutionally legitimate.
Orientation
Technological and economic change must serve human continuity.
Abundance produced through automation must not render people disposable.
Core Conditions
Any system governing economic transition or automation must preserve human agency, material stability, and freedom from coercion.
Arrangements that predictably concentrate gains while externalizing disruption or insecurity violate constitutional legitimacy.
Transition Integrity
Systems must account for displacement, retraining needs, and continuity of livelihood during periods of structural change.
Transition mechanisms that abandon affected populations constitute structural harm.
Legitimacy Threshold
Economic transitions that treat human displacement or deprivation as acceptable cost fall outside constitutional bounds.
Such systems are subject to constitutional remedy.
Boundary Statement
This applied framework does not prescribe economic policy, mandate transition programs, or replace democratic decision-making.
It defines the conditions under which economic transition and automation systems remain constitutionally legitimate.


