IAS may
Structure institutional review
- Define acceptance criteria
- Map reviewer routes
- Record assurance procedures
- Preserve reliance limitations
- Register institutional outcomes
IAS is how institutions safely rely on Terra Vita evidence without taking on Terra Vita’s authority.
Institutional acceptance · reliance · interoperability
IAS is the controlled interface where institutions assess, accept, condition or reject Terra Vita evidence outputs. It governs reliance without transferring authority.
Canonical reviewer route
Receiving institution · mandate · acceptance profile · reviewer route · reliance conditions · decision authority.
The Institutional Assurance Spine governs how evidence maturity, attribution, assurance, project authority and capital-flow readiness are presented for external institutional review. It is protected because reviewer routes, reliance conditions, acceptance records and institutional outcomes must remain controlled, attributable and auditable. IAS attaches directly to the Governance Spine: the Governance Spine governs the evidence chain, while IAS governs the conditions under which an authorised institution may review and rely on its outputs.
Evidence alone is insufficient for institutional acceptance. IAS provides the governance architecture that makes evidence decision-grade by resolving authority, reviewer route, assurance scope, reliance conditions and institutional accountability without transferring decision authority to Terra Vita.
For institutions
The public architecture explains the method. The protected operational registry contains institution profiles, reviewer actions, evidence references, reliance conditions and decision records.
IAS may
IAS may not
Ecosystem position
IAS governs institutional acceptance of module outputs. It does not recreate module logic.
Default programme entry
Each new Terra Vita case begins with a programme-authority profile and a separate IAS-0 acceptance review. The programme code links the Hub, FieldTrace, Capital-Flow Readiness, Project Authority Lock, Funding Spine, assurance and controlled-release records without duplicating the underlying evidence.
Canonical sequence
No route may proceed without an identified institution, mandate, decision authority and applicable acceptance profile.
Step 0 fixes the institutional context before any evidence is assessed. Each subsequent step preserves the authority boundary and produces a controlled review object.
Entry-lock rule: all six fields must be resolved before assessment begins. Any unresolved field triggers the failure lock and halts the review sequence.
Eight controlled domains
| Domain | Minimum threshold | Failure condition | Controlled output |
|---|
Versioned control set
Every protocol carries a purpose, bounded procedures, reviewer role, output and authority boundary.
Institution-specific mapping
Compatibility does not imply equivalence, accreditation, endorsement or formal recognition.
Controlled release families
Reviewer-grade · version-controlled · authority-bounded · reconstructable.
IAS outputs are reviewer-grade, version-controlled, authority-bounded and reconstructable. Each output remains linked to its source evidence, applicable protocol, reviewer role, reliance conditions and release record.
Format examples
These skeletons show the minimum structure. The protected registry supplies the programme-specific evidence references, reviewer findings and release controls.
Ecosystem coverage
IAS references and governs released module outputs. It does not absorb operational functions.
Worked example
A concrete example of how IAS governs a module output without copying, altering or approving the underlying evidence.
A field officer submits a geolocated observation, operator identity, timestamp, media file and task reference.
Source object remains in FieldTrace.The Hub registers evidence identity, provenance, attribution, version, supervisory review and any exception.
Governed evidence reference is created.The receiving institution’s acceptance criteria, reviewer route, assurance protocol and reliance conditions are applied.
IAS references the evidence; it does not duplicate it.The authorised institution may rely, condition, reject or return the output for remediation under its own mandate.
Only the institution records IAS-5 or IAS-6.Reliance classification
IAS-5 and IAS-6 require an authorised institutional decision record.
Status control
Status movement is never self-promotional. IAS-0 to IAS-4 are controlled workflow determinations made through recorded human review. IAS-5 and IAS-6 belong exclusively to the receiving institution.
Institution, mandate, purpose, authority, reviewer and evidence period are resolved.
Missing authority, evidence or assurance sends the case to remediation.
A human reviewer confirms the package can enter structured assessment.
Step 0–6 is complete, criteria are satisfied, material blockers are resolved, authority is locked and reliance conditions are recorded.
The package is formally released to an authorised receiving institution.
The receiving institution accepts with conditions or accepts under its own mandate.
Institutional questions
Terra Vita maintains the controlled baseline. The receiving institution defines or approves its mandate-specific acceptance profile. Institution-specific criteria are recorded separately and take precedence for that institution’s determination.
The disagreement is recorded as an exception, additional criterion or remediation requirement. The institution may reject the package or require a revised review. IAS cannot compel reliance.
Yes. The route preserves reviewer identity, evidence references, procedures, exceptions, versions, release events and audit history so an authorised independent party can reconstruct the review.
Each institution receives its own acceptance profile, reviewer route and outcome. IAS does not collapse conflicting criteria into a single lowest-common-denominator status; crosswalks identify common and divergent requirements.
Canonical position
Audit continuity
Version, release date, materiality, affected criteria or protocols, migration impact and review requirement are recorded.
An IAS-5 or IAS-6 outcome remains scoped to the exact version, evidence set and protocol reviewed by the institution.
When criteria, protocols or authority rules change materially, active accepted reviews receive a change notice and must be acknowledged or reassessed.
A new IAS version does not silently rewrite an existing institutional outcome. The receiving institution determines whether continued reliance, conditions or re-review are required.