Let us continue this important discussion about how to build strong and effective systems. Part of this process involves thinking about both economic and social models and how they can work together to enhance societal development and accelerate innovation (We will make the connection at some point but for now we just discuss and ponder the possibilities based in available literature. Withhold judgement.).
Fields such as economics, sociology, and justice are often studied separately because they rely on different forms of reasoning and have developed into distinct academic disciplines. However, they do not exist in isolation. In today's world, understanding complex problems requires the integration of multiple fields because everything operates in relationship to everything else.
(As an example the sun and the moon or a flower and the dirt or a bird and the air. We can't always directly see the connection but by understanding we eventually can.)
When we discuss justice, we are not approaching it from a partisan or political perspective. Instead, we are examining its fundamental purpose and how it can either contribute to or hinder social and economic development. These concepts are not limited to courts or legal institutions. They apply to virtually any organization because all systems share common characteristics: inputs, processes, outputs, and the people who shape their culture.
The individuals within a system develop perspectives based on their training, education, experiences, and the traditions of their profession. These influences often become so deeply embedded that people rarely stop to question them. They see the word through their lens and skip over lots of non-confirming information.
One way to explore these ideas is through a philosophical thought experiment called "The Story of the Clan," inspired by Plato's Allegory of the Cave. As participants move through different layers of understanding, they begin to recognize that their assumptions and perceptions may not be as accurate as they once believed (Heuristic initial behaviors that give way to something else.). Philosophical Symbolic Artifacts
In this learning story, some individuals misuse their positions for personal gain. They target others, violate rights, intimidate critics, discriminate based on religion, publicly humiliate people, and even involve the innocent. The setting is a closed system where the actors know one another well and share an interest in protecting the network from outside scrutiny (All behavior is goal directed and there are potential incentives to in-group members to keep it that way.). Whistleblowers and those who report wrongdoing often become targets themselves (Two different values and systems.).
Over time, complaints accumulate. Problems are ignored, misconduct goes unaddressed, and the pressure continues to build. Eventually, the volume of concerns becomes too great to conceal. What many people discover is that the majority of individuals within the system believed they were doing the right thing. They followed accepted norms, trusted authority figures, and relied on the stories they had been told. Yet they later realize they were often acting on information provided by individuals with certain dark triad traits who had abused their positions for years.
As more victims come forward, the system faces a choice. In the learning story, the institutions eventually acknowledge the wrongdoing and take corrective action. This creates an opportunity to better understand how systems function and how they can fail. Ways to improve them and make them more resilient. If they choose the other way it continues to creates an implicit drag (a type of corruption tax) where unwritten rules define behaviors not around growth and necessity but around individuals or weakly constructed ideologies.
The lesson is that whenever bias exists, whenever procedures create unnecessary inequities, or whenever institutions drift away from their core mission, problems emerge. That is why positions of authority should be entrusted to individuals based primarily on competence, integrity, and capability rather than social connections alone. Relationships and networking have value, but they should never be the sole basis for leadership or decision-making authority.
The strategic priorities discussed below reflect many of these same themes. They emphasize fairness, impartiality, access to justice, adequate resources, and procedures that support equitable outcomes. While no system is perfect, improvement is always possible.
Our responsibility is to recognize what works well, honestly evaluate what needs improvement, and remain focused on continued development. Righting the wrong leads to positive development. The quality of our institutions affects every part of society. Research in sociology, psychology, economics, and human capital development consistently demonstrates that unresolved problems within key institutions eventually surface elsewhere. They continue to influence communities, organizations, and future generations until they are addressed (There is individual and there is societal development. They are related.). When we learn, we grow and we reorient through knowledge.
These priorities below help us understand the focus that helps keep systems anchored.
*This is a philosophical thought experiment for learning purposes so take with a grain of salt. You can come to any conclusion you so desire. Cogito, ergo sum
Providing Fair and Impartial Justice: Strategic Priorities of the Federal Judiciary
- The Federal Judiciary identifies fair and impartial justice as a core priority, emphasizing equal treatment, non-discrimination, judicial independence, and accessibility for all participants in the legal system.
- The strategic plan calls for securing adequate resources, including funding, judgeships, juror compensation, courthouse facilities, and staffing, to ensure the effective administration of justice nationwide.
- The judiciary seeks to reduce delays, improve case management, lower unnecessary litigation costs, and maintain high-quality legal representation for criminal defendants through the Criminal Justice Act system.
- Efforts to improve access to justice include simplifying court procedures, expanding public access to court information, supporting self-represented litigants, improving jury participation, and enhancing accommodations for individuals with disabilities and limited English proficiency.
- The plan promotes effective criminal defense services by ensuring adequate training, resources, professional independence, and governance structures that support fair representation and protect constitutional rights.
Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. (n.d.). Priority 1: Providing fair and impartial justice. United States Courts. https://www.uscourts.gov/data-news/reports/strategic-planning/strategic-plan-federal-judiciary/priority-1-providing-fair-and-impartial-justice


