The Homeless Services Industrial Complex: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Billions in Los Angeles

High-status actors in Los Angeles’s homelessness response do not compete for authority by openly saying they want control over billions in taxpayer dollars. They compete by invoking moral languages that frame their authority as advancing compassion, equity, housing as a human right, and ending chronic homelessness. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions. In Los Angeles, the dominant vocabulary is compassion, Housing First, harm reduction, racial equity, and “no one should die on the streets.” These terms do not merely describe goals. They create a framework in which authority claims become inseparable from moral virtue. The system does not merely manage services. It saves lives and corrects systemic injustice. Whoever controls the definition of that mission controls the most powerful legitimating language available.
Los Angeles presents itself as a unified regional response devoted to shelter, housing, and supportive services. In practice it is a structured arena of elite competition organized around the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, city and county departments, nonprofit contractors, elected officials, and activist networks. Rival coalitions do not reject the mission of ending homelessness. They compete to define what compassion requires, who has the authority to interpret that standard, and which institutional priorities should follow. The structure channels this competition through contracting authority, governance boards, performance metrics, and resource allocation, making funding decisions, provider selection, and program design the highest-stakes battlegrounds.
Three institutions concentrate this struggle more than any others. Epistemic authority over what causes homelessness and how to solve it, the administrative and governance structure, and the funding and service allocation system are Los Angeles’s master domains. Whoever governs them governs truth claims about solutions, institutional direction, and access to billions in public resources. What looks like debate over Housing First versus treatment mandates, contract awards, or prioritization criteria is, underneath, a contest over who defines compassion, accountability, and success.
But Los Angeles differs from other cities in a way that changes the stakes of every internal conflict. Its model has become unusually exportable to state policy and other California jurisdictions. Winning an argument in Los Angeles is not just winning inside one region. It helps write rules that other counties and the state will later treat as obvious.
The epistemic authority system is the first and most fundamental arena because it governs the terms on which every other competition is conducted. The Housing First coalition, concentrated among LAHSA leadership, major nonprofit contractors such as PATH, the Weingart Center, and Special Service for Groups, along with progressive elected officials, uses the language of compassion, human rights, and evidence-based practice. Its claim is that homelessness is fundamentally a housing problem, that housing first with harm reduction produces the best outcomes, and that the region’s reputation depends on rejecting criminalization or treatment preconditions. By framing these standards as morally objective and data-driven, this coalition claims authority over what counts as valid policy. The critic who challenges these standards as ideologically rigid or empirically failing is not offering a competing framework. He lacks compassion.
Stephen P. Turner’s essentialist diagnosis applies here as it does across every case in this series. The Housing First coalition claims that a determinate body of best practice was established through decades of research and field experience, and that this practice must be transmitted intact to each successive generation of policy without the distortion introduced by accommodating it to political pressure or public frustration. This is the assertion of mysterious transmission in its secular form: a specific policy content, empirically authenticated, travels through the chain of credentialed interpreters to the present and is available to those properly formed within the professional tradition. Turner’s response is that even empirically grounded traditions are transmitted through human institutions, human interpreters, and human selection processes that introduce the same distortions he identifies everywhere else. The research base that the Housing First coalition treats as a unified evidentiary foundation was produced across decades, contains internal tensions, has been selectively compiled and cited by successive generations of advocates, and has been interpreted differently by different communities within the field. What gets transmitted is not a stable essence but a vast body of material from which each coalition selects the studies and emphases that support its current position while presenting that selection as faithful reception of the whole.
The accountability-reform coalition, associated with county supervisors, auditors, business groups, and some city council members, uses the language of results, transparency, fiscal responsibility, and public safety. Its claim is that traditional Housing First approaches have produced massive spending with minimal measurable reduction in street homelessness, and that policy must account for addiction, mental illness, and behavioral barriers. The Housing First coalition frames resistance as a defense of compassion. The reform coalition frames change as necessary for actual lives saved. Both claim to advance solutions. Both select different criteria for what counts as valid intervention.
The pragmatic-services bloc occupies the middle position that always appears in these jurisdictional contests. It uses the language of continuity, client welfare, and practical delivery to argue that ideological tensions must be managed rather than resolved, that the system’s capacity to function depends on maintaining enough internal coherence to move people off the streets, and that both the Housing First purists and the accountability reformers risk fracturing the provider network by pushing their claims to the point of contract disruption. This bloc is most powerful when payment crises and audit findings make the costs of conflict visible to elected officials, and least powerful when one coalition gains enough momentum to force a structural reorganization.
The administrative and governance structure is the second master domain, the one that translates ideological authority into institutional control. LAHSA’s commission, city and county elected bodies, and the new Los Angeles County Department of Homeless Services and Housing manage contracts, budgets, and strategic direction. The centralized-regional coalition uses the language of coordination, equity, and system-wide impact. Its claim is that a fragmented region requires strong joint authority to allocate billions effectively. The jurisdiction that resists central priorities undermines collective compassion.
Pinsof’s framework decodes this move precisely. By framing coordination as a moral requirement rather than an administrative preference, the centralized coalition converts organizational compliance into humanitarian necessity. Regions or agencies that resist unified structures are not making a different administrative choice. They are abandoning the unhoused. The language of coordination launders institutional centralization as ethical obligation, which is the coalition technology at its most powerful.
The local-control coalition responds with the language of accountability and taxpayer protection, arguing that effective service delivery requires direct oversight rather than opaque regional bureaucracy. Los Angeles is more internally divided than most peer jurisdictions, with the city and county operating as semi-sovereign players. This makes the LAHSA-versus-new-department struggle more explicit and more continuous than at institutions where organizational culture does more of the coordinating work.
Scathing 2025 audits and the county’s April 2025 decision to withdraw over $300 million annually from LAHSA and create its own Department of Homeless Services and Housing restructured this domain under direct pressure. County supervisors used the language of transparency and results to justify pulling funds and shifting to the new department, launched January 2026, which approved $843 to $908 million for fiscal year 2025-26 focused on interim and permanent housing with built-in oversight. The move was framed as fiscal stewardship. Its function was coalition survival. It protected Measure A sales-tax revenue, expected to generate roughly a billion dollars annually, from what critics called systemic waste, while allowing the county to maintain the appearance of principled reform rather than power consolidation.
The compliance-institutional bloc focuses on enforcement, using the language of accountability, organizational integrity, and the rule of contracted obligation. Its argument is that a system that awards contracts it cannot monitor loses credibility and authority, and that the selective non-compliance of providers and the selective non-payment of funders set precedents that could undermine the entire governance structure. This bloc is less interested in specific doctrinal questions about Housing First than in the organizational principle that voted allocations must move through the system without political interference or bureaucratic obstruction.
The funding and service allocation system is the third master domain, where questions of access, prioritization, and results get decided in practice. The equity-and-housing coalition uses the language of racial justice, immediate shelter, and lived experience, arguing that allocation must prioritize unsheltered individuals and rapid rehousing regardless of behavioral barriers. The accountability-and-outcomes coalition uses the language of measurable success, cost-effectiveness, and public safety, arguing that funds must go to programs with verifiable exits from homelessness and that prioritization cannot ignore addiction and mental illness.
Both claim to define compassion. Both reconstruct the same audits and the same Point-in-Time counts to support incompatible conclusions about who deserves priority.
Turner’s essentialist analysis applies to both positions in the allocation debate. The equity coalition claims that the system has an essential obligation to the most vulnerable that must be protected against the diluting effects of performance pressure and political optics. The accountability coalition claims that the system has an essential commitment to results that must not be sacrificed to categorical inclusion criteria. Both claims assert privileged access to what the system truly is for, and both reconstruct that identity from the same historical materials, the founding language of the McKinney-Vento Act, the early research on Housing First, the statements of HUD officials, selecting the episodes and emphases that support their current positions while presenting that selection as recovery of authentic institutional purpose.
The 2025-2026 confrontation with federal oversight turned this domain into a constitutional and fiscal battleground. Federal prosecutors and a U.S. Attorney’s task force launched investigations citing billions poorly tracked, including a $23 million fraud case involving a nonprofit executive who allegedly used LAHSA funds for luxury purchases. A court-ordered Alvarez and Marsal audit revealed $2.3 billion in city homelessness spending between 2021 and 2024 that LAHSA and the city could not fully account for, with fragmented records and unverified contractor expenses. County leaders deployed the language of anti-fraud and stewardship to justify direct contracting. City officials countered with the vocabulary of service continuity and anti-bureaucracy, framing county actions as disruptive overreach that harms unhoused people.
Measure A added another front. The half-cent sales tax, approved in 2024, funnels proceeds partly through the new county department and LACAHSA for housing, but early shortfalls due to economic slowdowns have intensified fights over whether funds go to services or construction. Every dollar became contested. Every allocation signaled which coalition was gaining ground.
What happens in Los Angeles does not stay in Los Angeles. Its model spreads through three channels: workforce, data, and elite circulation.
Los Angeles trains a disproportionate share of the social workers, case managers, and nonprofit executives who carry the framework to other jurisdictions through hiring and consulting. LAHSA and city-county data shape state reports, HUD guidance, and national advocacy, creating a feedback loop where methods validated in Los Angeles gain prestige and prestige itself becomes evidence of validity. Los Angeles certifies programs and leaders who move into positions of authority across California government and nonprofits, carrying the frameworks stabilized during their tenure into practice.
The fiscal channel runs through state grants. The 2026 round of Homeless Housing, Assistance, and Prevention funding attached conditions that track closely with the Housing First and accountability vocabulary developed through LAHSA’s administrative history. Proposition 1 directed billions toward behavioral health and housing, with the Los Angeles County Care Community now serving as the prototype for similar facilities planned in the Bay Area. The legislative channel may matter more in the long run. The California Housing and Homelessness Agency, set to launch in July 2026, replaces fragmented state oversight with a centralized structure built around the coordination language that LAHSA popularized. AB 1924 requires the state to develop model practices for homelessness prevention drawn heavily from Los Angeles pilot programs. When a state agency selects model practices, it makes one city’s contested experiments legally binding for every county.
At most cities, coalition victory determines local policy. In Los Angeles, it helps determine statewide and national norms.
The big pattern across all three domains is the same pattern this series has identified in every case. Every coalition claims authority by asserting possession of something essential. Housing First elites claim compassion. Reformers claim deeper truth through accountability. Regional administrators claim coordination capacity. Local overseers claim independence. Equity advocates claim fairness through inclusion. Results advocates claim fairness through outcomes. Nonprofits claim impact. None of these actors presents its position as interest in sustaining a multi-billion-dollar jobs-and-contracts machine. All present it as necessity grounded in the moral mission or the obligations of government.
What makes the Los Angeles case particularly illuminating within this series is the fiscal intensification of every jurisdictional claim. Because the system understands itself as the humanitarian response to a crisis visible on every street corner, every institutional dispute carries moral weight that disputes in ordinary bureaucracies do not. A disagreement about contract oversight is not merely an administrative question. It is a question about whether children and veterans will sleep outside tonight. That humanitarian frame makes coalition claims more urgent, makes defection from the Housing First consensus more costly, and makes the bridging work of the pragmatic-services bloc more difficult, since both sides invoke human suffering to resist compromise.
The deeper conflict is structural. The system cannot admit it functions partly as an employment and contracting program for thousands of social workers, case managers, and nonprofit executives without weakening its claim to pure benevolence. Its authority depends on appearing above politics. Reform coalitions cannot accept the compassion claim because their coalition is built on exposing it as insufficient or performative.
Both sides expose something real. The dominant approach is not purely neutral. It is sustained by institutional consensus, selection, and reproduction. But the reform alternative does not magically solve entrenched behavioral health and housing shortages. It shifts trust to a different coalition.
The Los Angeles homeless services system is governed not by a single unified authority but by competing coalitions operating within a multi-jurisdictional structure topped by no clear apex, each using a different moral language to justify control over its master institutions. The tensions visible in compliance disputes, audit findings, and payment crises are not signs of a system losing its purpose or drifting from its mission. They are the equilibrium through which Los Angeles governs itself, the ongoing negotiation between coalitions that cannot fully displace each other without fracturing the contracting and service infrastructure that gives all of them their platform and funding. The jurisdictional wars continue, channeled upward through audits and legislative hearings toward the state level where the highest-stakes decisions are now made, determining who defines compassion and who has the institutional position to make that definition binding on a state that has decided Los Angeles knows best.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Power in Global Energy

High-status actors in the global energy order do not compete for authority by openly saying they want power. They compete by invoking moral languages that frame their authority as defending energy security, stabilizing markets, accelerating decarbonization, or protecting the rules-based system of maritime trade. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions. In the current energy crisis, the dominant vocabulary is resilience, diversification, climate transition, emergency response, freedom of navigation, and burden-sharing. These terms do not merely describe policy choices. They create a framework in which authority claims become inseparable from survival. The question is not merely how to keep lights on and tankers moving. It is who gets to define what counts as prudence, what counts as dependence, and who should bear the cost when the Strait of Hormuz closes.
On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched surprise airstrikes across Iran, killing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and numerous other officials. Iran responded with missile and drone strikes against Israel and American bases throughout the region, including in Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. A drone struck Britain’s Akrotiri base on Cyprus. Iran forced the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. On the morning of March 2, oil prices spiked roughly eight percent and the European gas price about twenty percent. In March 2026, with Brent crude rising toward $94 a barrel, IEA member countries agreed to release 400 million barrels from emergency reserves. The war that produced this shock did not emerge from nowhere. It was the culmination of a decade of deferred reckonings over nuclear negotiations, proxy conflict, and the structural vulnerability of a global energy system that had been quietly dismantling its own redundancy in the name of transition.
The global energy system presents itself as a coordinated architecture of markets, alliances, and emergency response. In practice it is a structured arena of elite competition organized around states, energy ministries, multilateral agencies, utilities, financial institutions, and shipping and insurance markets. Rival coalitions do not reject the idea that energy security matters. They compete to define what it requires, who has the authority to interpret that requirement, and which institutional priorities should follow. The closure of Hormuz compresses years of unresolved disputes over nuclear closures, domestic production, gas storage, green investment, sanctions, shipping security, and strategic reserves into a single question of triage. The burden is not shared equally. In 2025, nearly fifteen million barrels per day of crude passed through the strait. China and India took forty-four percent of those exports. Japan and Korea were particularly reliant on the flows. Only about four percent of those crude volumes went to Europe, though Europe is deeply exposed through global price markets regardless of its limited direct imports.
Three institutions concentrate this struggle more than any others. The maritime chokepoint and emergency-stock system, the domestic generation and fuel-supply mix of major importing states, and the alliance burden-sharing framework are the master domains. Whoever governs them governs price stability, industrial continuity, and the political meaning of dependence. What looks like debate over naval escorts, reserve releases, renewable targets, gas import terminals, or nuclear phaseouts is, underneath, a contest over who gets to define prudent statecraft and who gets to make others pay for their preferred version of it.
The chokepoint and emergency-stock system is the first and most fundamental arena. The maritime-security coalition, concentrated in American strategic circles, Gulf producers, shipping insurers, and the IEA emergency-response system, uses the language of freedom of navigation, market stabilization, and deterrence. Its claim is that the first duty of energy statecraft is to keep the chokepoints open and the tanker system functioning. When Hormuz closes and insurers pull back, the coalition treats naval protection, reserve releases, and coordinated state action as necessities rather than choices. By framing tanker security and reserve releases as neutral market stabilization, this coalition claims authority over the pace and terms of response. The actor who says Europe should live with the consequences of its own energy choices, or that the United States should not underwrite another round of allied vulnerability, is not merely arguing over budget priorities. He is said to be threatening the global commons. The language of stabilization launders a specific distribution of costs as if it were an obvious public good.
The Trump administration’s decision to join Israel in striking Iran adds a layer that the maritime-security vocabulary struggles to contain. Administration officials offered varied explanations for the war, prevention, deterrence, resource security, and regime change, because different audiences required different coalition technologies. The prevention and deterrence language recruited traditional security allies. The resource security language recruited domestic economic nationalists. The regime change language recruited Iranian diaspora communities and democracy advocates. The Pentagon and Iran both rejected claims that Iran had been preparing an attack. The IAEA said there was no evidence of a structured nuclear weapons program at the time of the strikes. Legal and international relations experts called the attacks illegal under American law and a violation of Iranian sovereignty. What looks like a security operation converts, through Pinsof’s lens, a contested decision for war into a necessary response to imminent threat, recruiting allies who might otherwise object and disarming critics who would have to argue against necessity rather than choice.
Turner’s essentialist diagnosis applies directly. The maritime-security coalition claims access to a determinate body of expertise about emergency response, deterrence signaling, reserve adequacy, and market psychology. But these claims travel through institutions whose own assumptions are contestable. The IEA stockholding regime requires members to hold stocks equal to at least ninety days of net oil imports. States vary greatly in how fully and credibly they meet that obligation. Australia has long carried criticism for inadequate liquid-fuel reserves relative to IEA standards despite being a wealthy resource exporter. What presents itself as a smooth technical system is a patchwork of unequal preparations and selective compliance.
The domestic generation and fuel-supply mix is the second master domain, where the moral language of climate and the hard language of system reliability most sharply collide. The transition-resilience coalition, strongest in European policy circles, climate ministries, and clean-energy investment, uses the language of decarbonization, diversification, and strategic independence from hostile suppliers. Its claim is that the answer to vulnerability is to electrify, build renewables, expand grids and storage, and reduce dependence on imported fossil fuels. This coalition can point to real achievements. The IEA reports that renewables are set to meet more than ninety percent of global electricity demand growth through 2030, and European clean-energy investment has surged. China’s example is instructive. More than thirty percent of China’s final energy consumption now comes from electricity, compared with just over twenty percent globally and less than a quarter in the EU. More than half of cars sold in China are electric. Beijing has pursued an energy security strategy built around electrification specifically to reduce exposure to geopolitical chokepoints, and that strategy gives it somewhat more cushion than it otherwise would have had when Hormuz closed.
But the dispatchability and hard-capacity bloc uses the language of baseload, firm power, reserve margins, and industrial realism. Its claim is that many Western governments weakened their own resilience by closing dispatchable capacity before building enough replacement firmness. Germany phased out nuclear power in 2023. The Netherlands moved to end Groningen gas production by 2024, even as Europe remained exposed to import shocks. Norway, now the EU’s largest gas supplier providing roughly a third of the bloc’s annual consumption and half of the United Kingdom’s, has made clear it is already operating near maximum output. Oslo has pointed out that Russia has large plans to expand LNG production in the Arctic and argues that EU restrictions on Arctic exploration leave the bloc in a structurally weak position. The hard-capacity coalition’s point is not that renewables failed. It is that investment in renewables does not automatically solve the problems of firm capacity, fuel security, or chokepoint exposure, especially when nuclear and domestic gas are reduced faster than substitutes for reliability can be installed.
Turner’s analysis applies with particular clarity here. The transition-resilience coalition claims the true future-facing model, one in which dependence on imported hydrocarbons fades with electrification. The hard-capacity coalition claims the true realism of system operation, grounded in controllable generation and domestic fuel. Both positions rest on selective emphasis inside a complex empirical landscape. One highlights long-run structural change. The other highlights short-run survivability under stress. In March 2026, when European gas prices have spiked twenty percent and EU leaders are convening in emergency session in Brussels, the short-run argument commands the room.
The summit debate itself illustrates the coalition logic precisely. Belgium’s Prime Minister called for normalizing relations with Russia to regain access to cheap energy, claiming that European leaders privately agreed but lacked the courage to say so. Italy’s Prime Minister demanded the urgent suspension of the Emissions Trading System for electricity production. Several Central European states have long opposed the ETS in principle. Spain, Sweden, and Denmark have resisted any weakening, arguing it penalizes companies that modernized and rewards those that clung to fossil fuels. Both sides invoke the Iran war to support positions they held before it started. The crisis serves as a coalition technology for each bloc, recruited as evidence of whatever structural failure a given actor was already attributing to its opponents.
The alliance burden-sharing framework is the third master domain, and the one that gives the why-should-America-bail-them-out question its real force. The alliance-management coalition uses the language of solidarity, integrated markets, and collective security. Its claim is that the United States has an interest in preventing cascading energy shocks among allies because allied recession, industrial dislocation, and political fragmentation weaken the broader Western position. Releasing strategic stocks, escorting shipping, and backstopping energy markets are not charity. They are alliance maintenance.
The sovereignty-and-consequence coalition uses a different vocabulary. It speaks of burden-sharing, moral hazard, and national responsibility. Its claim is that states that shuttered nuclear plants, constrained domestic production, underbuilt fuel reserves, and relied on abstract transition narratives should bear the costs of those choices rather than socialize them through American military and financial power. Trump this week demanded that European countries send warships to the Strait of Hormuz to keep it open. When German Chancellor Friedrich Merz sat silently beside Trump in the White House as the American president berated Spain for refusing to allow military bases on its territory to be used for strikes on Iran, the silence illustrated the depth of European energy dependence on the United States. Germany now receives as much as ninety-six percent of its LNG from the United States. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen signed a deal at Trump’s Turnberry golf resort last July committing to $750 billion in American oil, LNG, and nuclear technology purchases over three years in exchange for a reduced tariff threat. What was presented as a strategic diversification away from Russian dependency was in practice a transfer of dependency to a different supplier with different leverage and the same willingness to use it.
Dan Marks of the Royal United Services Institute captures the structural problem clearly: Europe can likely secure energy supplies in the current crisis because it can out-pay other regions, but the problem is cost and competitiveness. And the wildcards accumulate. What if Trump decided to keep energy for American domestic consumption to reduce petrol prices at home, or to punish European governments for inadequate military support in the Gulf? What if storms or fires destroyed American LNG terminals? Each diversification move creates a new set of dependencies whose political character is revealed only at the moment of stress.
The Asia dimension makes the burden-sharing calculation structurally different from any previous crisis. Japan and Korea are wholly dependent on Hormuz flows. China and India together took forty-four percent of the crude exports through the strait in 2025. The United States is stabilizing a corridor whose disruption hits East Asian manufacturing and Chinese energy security at least as hard as anyone else. The free navigation language sounds universal. It converts others’ structural dependence into Washington’s standing obligation. The sovereignty coalition recognizes this and frames the question accordingly: by what principle does Chinese and Indian energy dependence on a chokepoint America controls through military force become an American duty rather than a Chinese and Indian problem?
The overall pattern holds across all three domains. Every coalition claims authority by asserting possession of something essential. Maritime-security actors claim the stabilizing knowledge and military capacity that global trade requires. Transition technocrats claim the future-proof strategy that ends dependence. Hard-capacity realists claim the physical understanding of what keeps systems running under stress. Alliance managers claim the coordinating capacity that holds the order together. Sovereignty advocates claim the moral clarity to say that countries should live with the consequences of their own decisions. None admits that institutional interests shape these claims. All present them as necessities visible to those with proper understanding of energy security.
A European diplomat told the BBC this week: we swore we’d learn, we promised things would change, but here we are, the same divisions and the same dilemmas as after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The energy analyst Dan Marks said it more tersely: think back to the 1970s and American congressional action on energy dependency, and now it is 2026 and there is another gas crisis and the exposure is as great as it ever was. Turner would recognize the pattern instantly. Every coalition has presented its preferred solution, renewables, gas, nuclear, diversification, alliance solidarity, as the stable essence of security that was always there waiting to be properly understood. Every crisis reveals that the essence was a construction, maintained by institutional consensus until the next chokepoint made the work visible. The jurisdictional struggle continues in the tanker lanes and the summit halls, determining who defines prudence and who gets stuck with the bill when the lights go out.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Power at UCLA Medical School

High-status actors at UCLA’s David Geffen School of Medicine do not compete for authority by openly saying they want power. They compete by invoking moral languages that frame their authority as protecting patients, widening access to care, advancing medical excellence, and serving California’s population. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions. At UCLA Med, the dominant vocabulary is merit, patient safety, diversity, holistic review, health equity, and public mission. These terms do not merely describe goals. They create a framework in which authority claims become inseparable from care itself. The school does not merely train doctors. It defines what a good doctor is and what kind of society medical education should reproduce. Whoever controls that definition controls the most powerful legitimating language available.
UCLA’s medical school presents itself as a leading public institution committed to scientific rigor, clinical excellence, and service to a diverse state. In practice it is a structured arena of elite competition organized around admissions committees, faculty departments, hospital leadership, UC-wide bureaucracy, and a growing legal-political battlefield that now includes the Department of Justice, Congress, outside advocacy groups, and national media. Rival coalitions do not reject the language of patient care or fairness. They compete to define what those words require, who has the authority to interpret them, and which institutional priorities should follow. What looks like debate over admissions criteria, curricular mission, or rankings is, underneath, a contest over who defines medical merit itself. That contest became explicit in May 2025, when Do No Harm, Students for Fair Admissions, and a rejected applicant sued UCLA’s medical school alleging unlawful race-conscious admissions. In January 2026, the Justice Department moved to join the suit, alleging a systemically racist approach and racial balancing. In February 2026, Judge John W. Holcomb granted the DOJ’s motion to intervene, formally nationalizing what had been a local professional dispute.
Three institutions concentrate this struggle more than any others. Clinical and educational authority, the admissions and selection system, and the reputation-funding-legitimacy network are UCLA Med’s master domains. Whoever governs them governs how future physicians are trained, who gets access to that training, and which definition of excellence prevails in a public institution under heavy external scrutiny.
The clinical and educational authority system is the first and most fundamental arena. The traditionalist-meritocratic coalition, concentrated among faculty physicians, outside physician groups, and the anti-DEI litigating bloc, uses the language of rigor, standards, competence, and patient safety. Its claim is that medicine is unforgiving, that admissions should rely heavily on MCAT scores and grades, and that relativizing those indicators risks producing weaker physicians and worse patient outcomes. The DOJ’s complaint cited median MCAT disparities across four entering classes, with Black and Latino matriculants averaging 506 to 509 against 513 to 516 for white and Asian American students. Whistleblowers alleged that admissions leadership required interview responses designed to surface race and used holistic review to confirm it. By framing traditional metrics as the best guardians of patient welfare and legal fairness, this coalition claims authority over the meaning of merit. The admissions dean who uses broader criteria is not experimenting with policy. In this telling, she risks patient safety and substitutes ideology for standards.
Turner’s essentialist diagnosis applies directly. The meritocratic coalition presents MCAT scores as stable, transparent measures of the qualities medicine most needs. But those indicators are institutional proxies, not essences. They have predictive value, and they also reflect unequal educational pathways, coaching, and social sorting. Their authority depends on the profession continuing to treat them as neutral enough to stabilize the pipeline. UCLA became controversial precisely because a rival coalition challenged that neutrality in practice.
The equity-and-mission coalition, concentrated among admissions leadership, diversity-oriented administrators, and public health faculty, uses the language of service, structural inequality, community need, and fairness through context. Its claim is that a good doctor is not merely a high-scoring test taker but someone capable of serving real populations in a large, diverse, unequal state. UCLA’s public posture in litigation has been procedural rather than ideological. It says the school follows federal and state anti-discrimination law while remaining committed to fair processes. The phrase holistic review does the central legitimating work. It allows the school to pursue non-metric criteria without conceding that it is abandoning merit. In this sense holistic does the same work that context and equity do elsewhere in elite institutions. It transforms a contested selection philosophy into a more humane vision of judgment.
Both coalitions claim access to what merit truly is. One locates it in standardized indicators and formal equality. The other locates it in broader capacities and mission fit. Neither presents its interpretation as interest. Both present it as necessity grounded in what medicine requires.
The admissions and selection system is the second master domain, now under direct federal assault. On February 24, 2026, just three days before the hearing on DOJ intervention in the admissions suit, the DOJ filed a separate eighty-one-page complaint against UCLA under Title VII, alleging that the university failed to protect Jewish and Israeli employees during the 2024 campus encampments and created a hostile work environment. The timing was not incidental. By hitting the university with Title VI and Title VII suits in the same month, the administration attempted a total jurisdictional siege, framing Chancellor Julio Frenk and Dean Jennifer Lucero as having presided over systemic discrimination across multiple protected categories at once. Critics such as Stanley Goldfarb of Do No Harm used the vocabulary of adult supervision, arguing that the essence of medical education has been poisoned by ideology and must be returned to its lifesaving mission. The administration’s coalition technology links these two suits through the language of institutional culture, arguing that the same leadership failures that produced one form of discrimination produced the other.
UCLA’s response has been to attempt categorical isolation, keeping the admissions suit separate from the employment suit and challenging the DOJ’s procedural standing. Under Title VI, the federal government is technically required to seek voluntary compliance before initiating litigation. UCLA’s legal team frames the DOJ as having used a neutral compliance review to launch a predetermined lawsuit without giving the school a fair chance to resolve matters informally. The jurisdictional move strips the federal government of moral authority before the merits are reached. UCLA is not yet arguing about MCAT scores. It is arguing that the process itself is illegitimate.
The reputation-funding-legitimacy network is the third master domain, and the one that makes the UCLA case especially unstable. The administration has suspended nearly $584 million in federal research grants, linking the freeze to both antisemitism allegations and alleged race-based admissions. UCLA’s professional-pragmatic bloc, composed of researchers and hospital physicians rather than admissions administrators, has responded by arguing that the DOJ’s litigation holds cancer research hostage and undermines American leadership in biomedicine. The language shifts the frame from campus culture to national competitiveness, making the costs of federal victory appear too high for the public to sustain. When a UCLA astrophysicist or oncologist speaks in national media about research disruption, he speaks not as an administrator defending a policy but as a scientist whose work is being held hostage by politics. The framing is identical to Harvard’s pivot from academic freedom to biotechnology leadership, and it recruits the same sympathetic audience.
That audience is not assembled by accident. UCLA benefits from a media and information infrastructure largely aligned with the professional-class institutions under federal attack. The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and higher education press consistently frame the DOJ intervention through the vocabulary UCLA prefers, emphasizing procedural overreach, student privacy, and the damage to research rather than the MCAT disparities the government emphasizes. Google’s search architecture, shaped by quality signals that privilege institutional and credentialed sources, systematically elevates coverage from these outlets over the commentary produced by Do No Harm, conservative legal blogs, or MAGA-adjacent media. The result is an information environment where the dominant public framing of the UCLA case treats federal intervention as aggression and UCLA’s resistance as principled defense of science and law. This is not a conspiracy. It is structural. The professional-class institutions that dominate credentialed media, search ranking, and platform moderation share the social world and epistemic assumptions of the institutions they cover. They do not need to coordinate to produce consistent framing. They simply apply their own standards of what counts as a reliable source, a serious argument, and a responsible outlet, and those standards happen to disadvantage the coalition attacking UCLA.
Pinsof’s framework makes the information infrastructure visible as a coalition technology. Every search result that ranks a Science or Nature editorial about research funding above a Do No Harm press release is a move in the jurisdictional contest. Every New York Times framing that leads with faculty concern about federal overreach rather than with MCAT score tables shifts the moral weight of the dispute. The administration’s coalition recognizes this, which is partly why its rhetoric targets mainstream media, elite universities, and Big Tech as a unified adversarial bloc. From the administration’s perspective, the information infrastructure does not merely report the conflict. It participates in it on UCLA’s side.
Turner’s analysis applies to both the legal and informational dimensions. Each side claims access to what the case truly is. The DOJ presents it as a civil rights enforcement action against an institution that evaded the Supreme Court’s mandate through euphemism and indirect racial proxies. UCLA presents it as a politicized assault on a public institution committed to serving California through lawful, mission-aligned processes. Both reconstruct the same legal materials, the same MCAT data, the same admissions files, to support incompatible conclusions. What is presented as the obvious reading in each case is the product of institutional work, coalition maintenance, and information management.
The case is now moving toward a jury trial set for June 2027, with a class certification hearing in November 2026. The discovery phase beginning in spring 2026 will produce federal subpoenas for internal communications, admissions training materials, and the specific weighting systems used in holistic review. UCLA’s admissions office, which has functioned as a relatively opaque internal body, will face the most invasive external scrutiny in the school’s history. Whether the holistic review process can survive that scrutiny while maintaining its legitimating function, the claim that it is both race-neutral and mission-serving, is the central question the litigation will force into the open.
The overall pattern holds. Every coalition claims authority by asserting possession of something essential. Traditionalists claim competence, legality, and patient safety. Equity actors claim justice, representation, and public mission. Metrics defenders claim fairness through objectivity. Holistic reviewers claim fairness through context. The federal government claims the authority of civil rights law and constitutional mandate. UCLA claims the authority of institutional expertise and public service. None presents its position as interest. All present it as necessity grounded in what medicine and law require.
What makes the UCLA case particularly illuminating in 2026 is that the fight has become public enough to expose the full machinery usually hidden behind institutional language. The masks have not just slipped inside committees and deans’ offices. They have slipped in federal court, in congressional hearings, in DOJ complaints, and in competing media ecosystems that now produce parallel realities about the same institution. UCLA is not merely defending a policy. It is defending its authority to define medical merit in a post-affirmative-action America, and it is doing so with the informational and institutional advantages of the professional-class coalition while its opponents try to delegitimize that coalition from outside it. The jurisdictional war continues through lawsuits, data mandates, frozen grants, and search rankings, determining who gets to say what a doctor is and who has the standing to make that definition stick.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Power at Harvard

Presidents, Corporation Fellows, provosts, and senior deans at Harvard University do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking languages of Veritas, Excellence, Academic Freedom, Moral Clarity, Diversity and Inclusion, or responsibility for sustaining the world’s preeminent producer of knowledge, leaders, and norms in an era of AI disruption, federal investigation, donor revolt, and the demographic transformation of American elite formation. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Institutional vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over the university’s voice, faculty hiring, curriculum design, admissions criteria, endowment strategy, and the invisible networks of elite credentialing, journal gatekeeping, fellowship pipelines, and national influence. At Harvard, the key language is not only academic. It is also cultural and civilizational. Veritas. Excellence. Academic Freedom. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of institution Harvard can sustain, how rigorous that scholarly culture should remain between the truth-seeking imperative and the institutional survival logic that now governs every consequential decision, and which forms of adaptation still count as faithful to what the institution is.
Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The assistant professor staying until three in the morning to finish a paper that might change how the field understands a problem is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. She is trying to make the data sing, and the intellectual labor that produces genuine discovery carries its own authority that exists independent of the institutional politics surrounding it. The department chair insisting on rigorous peer review enforces real standards that genuine scholarship requires. The practices of research, teaching, and intellectual formation carry internal authority that Alliance Theory explains the organization of control around but does not replace. Harvard’s genuine achievements in knowledge production, scientific discovery, and intellectual formation are real, and any analysis that reduces the institution entirely to coalition mechanics misses the thing that makes Harvard’s institutional story worth telling.
What has changed is the environment selecting on those achievements, and the conditions under which the institution discovers what it actually values.
Harvard does not decide what it values. It discovers what it values under pressure.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings are unique among animals in their awareness of their own mortality, and that most of human culture, religion, and social life organizes itself to manage the terror that awareness produces. We construct hero systems, cultural frameworks that promise symbolic immortality, that tell us our lives participate in something larger and more permanent than our individual bodies. To be a faithful member of a hero system is to transcend death symbolically. To lose one’s hero system is to be thrown back against the terror it was built to contain.
Harvard is a hero system organized around a specific and unusual fear, and that fear has been shifting in ways the institutional vocabulary cannot fully acknowledge without triggering the collapse it is designed to prevent. The institution used to organize itself around the terror of discovery failure: being scooped on the paradigm-shifting result, producing scholarship that subsequent evidence refutes, training leaders who fail when the stakes are real. That terror is productive. It motivates the three in the morning experiment, the willingness to pursue an unfashionable research direction for a decade, the intellectual honesty that acknowledges the result does not support the hypothesis. In significant parts of the institution, that terror has been replaced by the terror of legitimacy failure: being on the wrong side of history, speaking in the incorrect moral register, becoming the institution that the progressive coalition withdraws from rather than the one it sustains. Veritas as a living force means the institution pursues truth regardless of where it leads. Veritas as a branded relic means the institution invokes truth as a legitimating vocabulary while optimizing for the social conditions under which that invocation remains safe. The hero system persists. Its Beckerian anchor has shifted.
The Claudine Gay episode is the cleanest window into how the system actually works, and it is worth examining precisely because it reveals the mechanism at the moment of maximum institutional stress. Gay was not removed because of plagiarism in the abstract. Harvard has tolerated decades of citation slippage across entire fields, particularly in the social sciences and humanities where documentation standards are less rigorous than in the natural sciences and where the costs of minor citation failures are primarily reputational rather than scientific. What changed was the coalition environment after the October 2023 congressional hearing. When Gay struggled to answer whether calls for genocide violated Harvard policy, her response was internally coherent within the institution’s established language: context matters, academic freedom is fundamental, the university is committed to both safety and free expression. That language had worked effectively inside the institution for years. It catastrophically failed outside it.
The signal layer said Harvard stood for truth and moral seriousness. The cue layer said Harvard could not plainly condemn explicit calls for violence without the hedging that protecting the academic freedom of certain campus coalitions required. The gap between those two layers became visible to actors outside the system who were not bound by the institutional vocabulary that had previously managed the gap. Bill Ackman did not invent the vulnerability. He functioned as an external selection pressure that forced the institution to collapse the distinction between its moral vocabulary and its operational behavior. Once that collapse happened, Gay’s dissertation became a proxy battlefield. The question was not whether her citations were sloppy in isolation. It was whether the reproduction layer of the world’s most prestigious university was still selecting for the traits it claimed to honor, or whether it had been selecting for a different set of traits and maintaining the old vocabulary as a legitimating cover.
That is when the Beckerian hero system flickered in a way it had not since the institution last faced a comparable moment of external forced reckoning. Harvard has long told its members that they work at the hinge of truth itself, that their institutional participation in Veritas transcends individual mortality and connects them to something permanent. The Gay episode suggested that, at least in the parts of the institution that had most fully embraced the legitimacy hero system as a replacement for the discovery hero system, the hinge had moved in ways the institution had not acknowledged.
President Alan Garber’s response to that exposure is best understood not as a philosophical position but as an organizational triage operation. His institutional neutrality doctrine, which he articulated in a series of statements and policies beginning in early 2024, reads publicly as a principled stance about the appropriate scope of university speech. It is actually a coordination mechanism designed to reduce surface area at a moment when the institution’s every public statement was creating cascading veto points from donors, congressional overseers, faculty factions, alumni, and the broader public that had been paying attention to the Gay episode. Speech had become too costly. Neutrality reduces surface area without eliminating the institution’s capacity to express priorities through the channels that operate below the level of public statement: hiring decisions, research funding allocations, center creation, fellowship awards, and admissions criteria. The speech layer goes quiet so the capital allocation layer can operate with less friction.
But the selectivity of Harvard’s neutrality deserves direct attention. The institution does not apply neutrality consistently across all domains. It applies it strategically to reduce the coalition friction that public positions generate while maintaining the capacity to express institutional priorities through the mechanisms that do not trigger immediate public accountability. This is not hypocrisy in the simple sense. It is the institution learning to maintain its operational priorities while reducing the visibility of the gap between those priorities and its public vocabulary. That is Trivers’ deeper claim made institutional: the system learns to track and manipulate the signals that indicate compliance without fully complying, and it does this not through cynical coordination but through the distributed selection pressure that shapes what survives and what does not inside the institution.
Penny Pritzker as the Corporation’s senior fellow embodies the constraint layer in its most undiluted form. She does not speak the language of Veritas. She manages the conditions under which Veritas can be claimed at all. The Harvard Corporation is designed as the organ where external cues override internal signals without that override being publicly visible. During the donor revolt that followed the Gay episode, what determined the institution’s actual response was not faculty senate resolutions, student protest statements, or public intellectual interventions. It was whether large donors paused gifts, whether capital projects slowed, whether the federal government signaled that Harvard’s tax-exempt status and grant relationships were at risk, whether the institution’s $50 billion endowment faced the political risk of increased excise taxation that Congress was beginning to discuss seriously. Pritzker’s role is to translate those pressures into institutional doctrine without ever stating the translation in terms that would make the cue-signal divergence visible to the internal constituencies whose continued commitment the hero system requires.
The endowment itself has shifted from a pure institutional shield to a political target in ways that change the Corporation’s operating logic. The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act imposed a 1.4 percent excise tax on Harvard’s net investment income. The political pressure in 2026 to increase that rate, to tie institutional tax treatment to specific behavioral outcomes, or to use the endowment as leverage in the broader political conflict over elite university culture has turned the financial foundation of Harvard’s institutional independence into an ongoing negotiation with political actors who do not share the institution’s self-understanding. The institutional neutrality doctrine is partially a defensive response to that pressure: an attempt to signal to Congress that Harvard is a utility producing knowledge and training for the national benefit rather than a political actor whose cultural orientation justifies punitive treatment.
John Manning as provost is where the constraint layer’s pressures become enforceable inside the faculty. His background as a legal scholar makes him acutely sensitive to the institutional process questions that the post-Gay moment made urgent: what rules can be applied consistently across incompatible faculty factions without triggering the immediate coalition warfare that would further destabilize the institution? The answer he has developed is proceduralism. More explicit policies, more clearly articulated standards, more committees, more emphasis on viewpoint neutrality as a procedural commitment rather than a substantive one. This is not a discovery of principle. It is the selection of procedure as the only language that can be imposed across factions with genuinely incompatible values without forcing the immediate confrontation that would require the institution to choose which faction it actually represents. Procedure is the institutional equivalent of the neutrality doctrine: it reduces surface area, manages coalition friction, and defers the substantive resolution of incompatible goods indefinitely.
The judicialization of faculty life is the most concrete expression of this procedural adaptation. Faculty handbooks increasingly read like legal codes. Title IX offices, the Office for Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging, University General Counsel, and the various compliance infrastructures that have been installed across the institution’s schools have collectively created an environment where every significant professional interaction carries potential legal significance. Faculty members learn, through the accumulated small shocks of watching colleagues navigate these systems, that what is legally defensible often differs from what is intellectually honest. The behavioral crypsis this produces is subtle but pervasive: people say what can be documented as acceptable rather than what they actually think, and they learn over time to experience the acceptable as the authentic. The energy that productive scholarly communities direct toward discovery, mentorship, and intellectual risk-taking is diverted toward compliance navigation. The Müller’s ratchet of accumulated process layers imposes metabolic cost on the organism’s most productive members while creating institutional positions for people whose comparative advantage is administrative navigation rather than scholarly production.
George Daley at Harvard Medical School represents the constraint layer’s expression in the domain where external selection pressure is most immediate and least negotiable. NIH funding, lab productivity, publication pipelines, and clinical outcomes create a cue environment that is less amenable to signal-cue divergence than the humanities and social sciences because the external feedback is harder and faster. During the peak DEI expansion, HMS layered diversity requirements into hiring evaluations, grant framing, and faculty review processes. The recalibration that has occurred over the past two years has not taken the form of public policy reversal. It has taken the form of metric reordering. Search committees still file diversity statements and undergo implicit bias training. But the binding constraint in consequential hiring decisions is grant competitiveness, publication record, and the demonstrated capacity to sustain a productive lab. The diversity requirements remain as signals. The funding and scientific productivity metrics function as cues. The system has quietly reoptimized without announcing that it has done so, which is precisely the institutional learning that Trivers’ framework predicts: the organism maintains the vocabulary that satisfies the legitimacy requirements while reweighting the actual selection criteria to satisfy the survival requirements.
Hopi Hoekstra as Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences carries the most structurally exposed position in the institution’s academic leadership because she presides over the domain where the tension between the discovery hero system and the legitimacy hero system is most acute. The natural sciences within FAS operate under external selection pressure that keeps the cue environment relatively honest: the experiment either works or it does not, the grant is funded or it is not, the paper is accepted or it is rejected. The humanities and parts of the social sciences operate under much weaker external constraint and much stronger internal coalition pressure, which is why those domains became the primary arena for the signal inflation and ideological contestation that the Gay episode made publicly visible. Hoekstra must maintain the credibility of FAS as a unified academic enterprise while managing the reality that its constituent parts operate under fundamentally different selection environments and have developed correspondingly different relationships between their institutional vocabularies and their actual practices.
Srikant Datar at Harvard Business School has moved fastest toward a post-activist institutional equilibrium, and the speed of that movement reflects the different selection environment that professional school deans navigate. HBS students are already thinking in terms of incentives, markets, and reputational risk when they arrive, and the external constituencies whose opinion of HBS matters most, employers, alumni, and the business community broadly, have less patience for the kind of symbolic politics that dominated the College’s environment during the peak DEI era. The curriculum has shifted since 2023 toward more explicit engagement with tradeoffs, geopolitical complexity, AI disruption, and decision-making under uncertainty, and away from the overt moral instruction that characterized the period of maximum equity emphasis. The moral vocabulary persists. It has been subordinated to a decision-making framework in which it is one variable among others rather than the primary lens. That subordination is the HBS version of what Daley is doing at HMS and Garber is doing at the institutional level: not repudiating the signal layer but reweighting the cue layer beneath it.
The 2023 Supreme Court ruling on affirmative action forced the most technically demanding reproduction layer adaptation the institution has undergone in recent memory, and the adaptation reveals the system’s capacity for maintaining its goals while changing its mechanisms. Harvard publicly committed to continuing its diversity goals within the law’s constraints. The internal adaptation required rewriting the admissions process to achieve demographic outcomes similar to those of the previous system without using the variables the ruling prohibited. The result is an admissions process that relies more heavily on essays, life experience narratives, inferred adversity signals, and the geographic diversity proxy than the previous system did. Two applicants with similar academic profiles are now distinguished primarily by their capacity to encode distance traveled and identity into narrative form in ways that admissions readers can use to make the inferences the old system made directly. The official characterization of this process is holistic evaluation. The operative reality is that selection has become more dependent on subjective interpretation, narrative sophistication, and the capacity to produce legible identity signals than it was before the ruling. The metric did not disappear. It went underground, and it became harder to challenge externally because it is less visible.
The AI shock is the most significant environmental disruption Harvard faces, and it is only beginning to be felt at the institutional level in ways that will force the reproduction layer’s most fundamental recalibration. Large language models erode the reliability of the traditional academic signals that Harvard uses to identify and certify talent. Essays can be generated. Literature can be summarized and synthesized. Research designs can be assisted. The written work that has historically served as the primary evidence of intellectual capability across most of Harvard’s schools is becoming easier to produce without the underlying intellectual development it was designed to measure. The old markers of merit become fakeable in ways they were not when they required the accumulation of genuine knowledge and skill.
Harvard understands this at the leadership level, unevenly but with increasing clarity. Garber’s neutrality reduces the exposure of the institution’s credentialing function to political attack at precisely the moment when the credentialing function’s integrity is under pressure from technological disruption. Manning’s proceduralism creates defensible processes at precisely the moment when the substantive judgments those processes are supposed to capture are becoming harder to make reliably. Daley’s quiet reweighting toward hard metrics reflects the recognition that lab output and grant success remain among the few non-fakeable signals in an AI environment. Datar’s emphasis on decision frameworks and judgment under uncertainty reflects the recognition that what HBS can certify in its graduates is increasingly the human-in-the-loop judgment that AI cannot replicate rather than the analytical facility that AI is rapidly commoditizing.
The real jurisdictional war at Harvard is not between diversity and merit, or between progressivism and traditionalism, or between academic freedom and institutional responsibility. It is over what counts as non-fakeable excellence. That question is the successor to every previous jurisdictional war the institution has conducted, because it is the question that determines what the institution can legitimately certify and therefore what its credential is worth. In the natural sciences, the answer remains relatively stable: lab output, grant capture, reproducible results, and the accumulated tacit knowledge that distinguishes genuine scientific judgment from sophisticated pattern matching. In professional domains, it is shifting toward demonstrated judgment in high-stakes environments, network access, and the capacity for consequential decision-making under uncertainty that AI can assist but not substitute for. In the humanities and parts of the social sciences, the answer is genuinely unstable, and that instability is the source of the signal inflation, credential proliferation, and institutional contestation that has defined those domains for a decade.
The four castes negotiate these tensions in ways that the biological framework makes legible. The doctrine layer, anchored by Garber and the Corporation, defines what Harvard claims to be. The constraint layer, anchored by Pritzker, Barakett, and the endowment management infrastructure, defines what Harvard can afford to be. The expansion layer, anchored by the professional school deans and the interdisciplinary research initiatives, defines where Harvard can grow in ways consistent with both doctrine and constraint. The reproduction layer, anchored by the admissions infrastructure, faculty hiring processes, and the fellowship pipelines that distribute elite credentials across subsequent generations, defines who gets to belong to the institution that certifies American elite formation.
Harvard’s succession challenge has a specific and unusual character. The leaders who built the institution’s current prestige structure operated in an environment where the gap between the discovery hero system and the legitimacy hero system was smaller, where the external constraints imposed by federal investigation, donor revolt, and AI disruption were weaker, and where the internal coalition was more unified around a shared understanding of what excellence required. The current leadership is managing the divergence between those hero systems under conditions of maximum external pressure and minimum internal consensus. The people who advance through the current selection environment are those who can navigate the institutional compliance requirements, maintain the coalition relationships that protect the endowment and the federal funding, and produce enough visible scholarly output to maintain the Veritas signal without the tolerance for discovery-oriented disorder that the slower and messier version of genuine intellectual advance requires.
The jurisdictional contest at Harvard will be decided not by any internal policy choice or leadership decision but by the external selection pressures that force the institution to reveal what it actually values. The Gay episode was such a moment of forced revelation. The federal grant investigation that intensified in 2025 is another. The AI disruption of academic credentials will be the most sustained. Each pressure forces a gap between the signal layer and the cue layer to become visible, and each visibility event triggers the institutional learning that Trivers predicts: the system adapts by finding new ways to maintain the vocabulary while reweighting the actual selection criteria.
Reality does not care about the vocabulary. It selects for fitness and discards everything else. At Harvard University, the fitness that matters is not endowment performance or diversity metrics or federal grant totals or the institutional neutrality of public statements. It is whether the institution can still produce the knowledge, train the leaders, and maintain the scholarly standards that make the Harvard credential worth the institutional investment that two centuries of accumulated prestige represent. That function is either performed or it is not. The students who pay the tuition, the donors who make the gifts, the scholars who join the faculty, and the public that accepts the institution’s claim to cultural authority do not ultimately experience the vocabulary. They experience the output. The distance between Veritas as a living force and Veritas as a branded relic is the selection interval at Harvard, and it is measured not in quarterly metrics or donor satisfaction scores but in the slower and more ambiguous currency of whether the institution continues to produce things that could not have been produced anywhere else. The vocabulary will remain regardless. The question is whether it will continue to describe something real or whether it will persist as the legitimating language of an institution that has learned to perform excellence more effectively than it produces it.

Harvard’s dominant tacit order is not captured by its official language about truth, excellence, inclusion, or service. Those are the public creeds. The real system is a prestige machine that turns inherited polish, institutional fluency, social calibration, and controlled ambition into durable elite status. It presents itself as a meritocracy but runs on a dense web of unspoken arrangements that sort people long before any formal prize is awarded.
The first thing to grasp is that Harvard does not have one hierarchy. It has several overlapping hierarchies that reinforce each other. There is the old social hierarchy of wealth, manners, family background, prep-school ease, and private confidence. There is the extracurricular hierarchy of comp-based organizations, publications, institutes, clubs, and selective leadership posts. There is the academic hierarchy of concentrations, faculty patronage, prizes, fellowships, and letter-writers. There is the moral hierarchy of who gets to define the acceptable language of conscience, justice, and legitimacy. And there is the career hierarchy that hovers over everything, where some exits from Harvard clearly count more than others. The student heading to Goldman, McKinsey, Y Combinator, or a Rhodes interview occupies a different symbolic plane from the student drifting without a pipeline, even if nobody says so aloud. Harvard is a multi-level sorting system whose genius lies in making all these ladders feel natural, deserved, and only loosely connected, when in fact they are tightly braided together.
Concrete numbers illustrate the stratification. Harvard admitted 3.59 percent of applicants for the Class of 2028. A study of students between 2007 and 2011 found that 67 percent came from the top 20 percent of the income scale. Only 4.5 percent came from the bottom 20 percent. Fifteen percent came from the top 0.1 percent of households. Among White students admitted between 2014 and 2019, 43 percent were athletes, legacies, children of faculty, or on the Dean’s Interest List. Only 16 percent of Black, Asian, and Hispanic students fell into those categories. The institution preserves inherited status while it speaks the language of excellence.
The social hierarchy is the oldest layer and still matters because it trains the eye. Students learn quickly that certain kinds of ease carry enormous weight. The point is not just money. It is money translated into comportment. Some students arrive already knowing how to talk to famous professors, how to ask for favors without sounding needy, how to float through formal dinners, how to dress with expensive understatement, how to seem busy but never frantic, how to speak with full confidence without overselling themselves, and how to imply access without vulgar name-dropping. They know what institutions are for because they were raised around people who use institutions as instruments. Other students may have equal or greater raw intelligence, but they play catch-up in a social grammar that is never formally taught. Harvard’s famous hidden curriculum is really a curriculum in elite self-presentation, and that curriculum advantages those whose households, schools, and prior networks already taught them the codes.
That is why final clubs matter even when many students never join one and many faculty denounce them. The point is not that every powerful Harvard student belongs to a final club. The point is that these clubs symbolize and concentrate an old truth about the institution. Beneath the meritocratic language, there remains a zone of unapologetic exclusivity where status gets conferred through opaque recognition by people who themselves were already recognized. That is a pure form of elite reproduction. The clubs may be pressured, their public vocabulary may grow embarrassed, but they remain a living reminder that the institution’s deepest fantasy is not equality but selection. Even students who despise the clubs orient themselves in relation to them. The clubs anchor the imagination of who is really in.
The more consequential choke points today are not the old clubs but the comp-based organizations and high-status pipelines that convert social fluency into publicly legitimate credentials. The Harvard Crimson, the Lampoon, the Institute of Politics, the major consulting and finance clubs, and the nationally prestigious fellowships all function as conversion devices. They take tacit advantages and formalize them. Once through one of these gates, the next gate gets easier. You meet seniors who explain the next move. You receive tips on who matters. You internalize which faculty members write serious letters and which merely write pleasant ones. You learn how to present yourself not as hungry but as already destined. This is why comp culture is so central. Harvard’s hidden rules are not abstract. They are administered through selective, multi-stage rituals where judgment is partly about talent and partly about ease, tone, and resemblance to those already inside.
That resemblance matters because Harvard is full of unspoken boundaries around style. The deepest rule is that ambition must never look crude. Students are expected to want power, recognition, and elite placement. The institution is built around producing exactly that desire. But the wanting must be disciplined. Naked status-seeking is low status. Desperation is fatal. Boasting is provincial. Trying too hard is embarrassing. The ideal Harvard actor is ambitious without appearing grasping, ideological without sounding doctrinaire, brilliant without seeming obsessive, connected without looking transactional, and hardworking without showing strain. This is the famous ideal of effortless perfection, but that phrase is too soft. It is not just an aesthetic preference. It is a moralized status code. Visible struggle lowers rank because it suggests you were not born to the game.
The hero system elevates the frictionless broker. This person moves between elite domains without losing legitimacy in any of them. He speaks the language of justice while he chases prestige. He balances progressive rhetoric with corporate ambition. He is comfortable in a final club but publicly critical of elitism. He is fluent in diversity language but headed to McKinsey or Goldman. He is academically excellent but never obsessive, socially connected but never crude about it, ambitious but framed as inevitable rather than grasping. About 45 percent of recent graduates enter finance, consulting, or technology. The tacit hero is not the revolutionary outsider, the eccentric genius, or the uncompromising dissenter. He is the future cabinet secretary, nonprofit CEO, or prestige firm partner who can move between rooms without friction and call that movement service.
This helps explain why so much of Harvard life revolves around calibration. Students learn not only what to think but how to think in a way that remains institutionally admissible. The real boundary is often not left versus right. It is calibrated versus uncalibrated. Arguments survive when they arrive in the proper tone, with the proper references, the proper moral disclaimers, and the proper deference signals. Radical claims can survive if translated into approved institutional speech. Moderate claims fail when they arrive with the wrong energy, the wrong bluntness, or the wrong social location. A student from the right background can say something edgy and be read as interesting. A more awkward outsider may say something milder and be read as threatening or unsophisticated. A survey of the Class of 2024 found that roughly one third of seniors felt they could not express their views on campus. They fear peer backlash and social shunning. The institution judges the packaging of beliefs as much as the content.
That packaging is policed by a dispersed but effective set of enforcers. Not mainly the president or the dean, though they matter in moments of crisis. The real enforcers are house tutors, resident deans, junior faculty, preceptors, comp leaders, fellowship advisers, editors, student activists, and the thin but influential layer of students who already understand the institution better than their peers. These people teach the unwritten rules through praise, omission, subtle alarm, and selective sponsorship. They decide whom to encourage, whom to cool off, whom to take seriously, and whom to mark as socially clumsy. Because enforcement is decentralized, it feels less like coercion than atmosphere. No one has to say the full rulebook out loud. Students absorb it through tiny rewards and penalties.
The academic hierarchy is less innocent than it looks. Harvard presents intellectual life as the impartial pursuit of excellence, but academic prestige there is inseparable from patronage. A small number of faculty members and administrators possess power because they can open access to labs, recommendations, funded projects, fellowships, doctoral pipelines, and elite introductions. Students orient toward the right letter-writers and institutional sponsors. Academic performance matters, but in the upper reaches of Harvard the game is not just grades. It is proximity to powerful validators. That is why certain concentrations carry a special aura. Economics, government, computer science, and certain biosciences connect more directly to dominant pipelines of money, state power, and prestige. The humanities may still command symbolic respect, but the practical hierarchy is clearer than the official rhetoric admits.
Then there is the moral hierarchy. Harvard’s public language has for years been shaped by diversity, equity, inclusion, trauma-awareness, and justice-oriented vocabularies. Those frameworks serve real ethical purposes for many people, but they also function as coalition technology. They supply the institution with a language through which it can frame itself as morally advanced while managing internal tensions that are about power, status, and reproduction. This moral vocabulary does not eliminate hierarchy. It reframes hierarchy. Students and faculty who master the language acquire reputational authority even when they do not control the hardest institutional assets. They can shape what counts as good form, what requires ritual condemnation, what subjects require sensitivity, and how the institution publicly narrates itself. The moral-intellectual vanguard controls the rhetoric while the managerial and donor coalitions control the durable machinery. Harvard’s tacit stability depends on this trade.
Overt elitism must be publicly criticized but privately preserved. The university cannot openly celebrate exclusion, inherited advantage, social polish, or ruthless status competition without damaging its meritocratic image. Yet it cannot function without selective processes that reproduce precisely those things. So Harvard has evolved a dual language. Publicly it speaks in universalist and moral terms. Privately people still track who has the better background, the better summer, the stronger network, the more useful father, the more serious recommender, the more enviable postgrad option. The contradiction is not a bug. It is the operating principle. Harvard is an elite institution that must deny, or at least euphemize, the rawness of elite formation.
This duality produces a particular kind of person. Harvard generates highly competent operators who know how to navigate formal systems, build relationships across factions, speak in morally acceptable registers, and accumulate the right sequence of credentials. It is less good at producing people willing to violate the institution’s tacit grammar in pursuit of something new. The place rewards disciplined excellence within recognized channels. It is less comfortable with eccentricity that cannot be converted into prestige, or dissent that cannot be redescribed as institutional contribution. Even entrepreneurship at Harvard often carries this imprint. The highest-status founder is not the wild outsider but the founder who remains legible to faculty, donors, journalists, and policy elites.
The system now faces pressure from technology and politics. Artificial intelligence makes traditional signals of merit easier to fake. Essays and research summaries no longer guarantee intellectual development. This forces a contest over what counts as non-fakeable excellence. In the sciences, lab output and grant capture remain hard metrics. In the humanities, the signals are unstable, and that instability is the source of the signal inflation, credential proliferation, and institutional contestation that has defined those domains for a decade. The university turns to proceduralism to manage these tensions, producing more rules and committees to prevent open factional conflict. Faculty handbooks increasingly read like legal codes. The energy that productive scholarly communities direct toward discovery gets diverted toward compliance navigation. The system becomes safer and duller. It generates competent operators but fewer people willing to break the logic that produced them.
Harvard’s deepest tacit arrangement is the conversion of social inheritance and institutional fluency into morally legitimized merit. Its dominant relationships are sponsor and aspirant, peer and gatekeeper, insider and translator, donor world and academic world, moral talk and prestige accumulation. Its dominant boundaries are not simply class or ideology, though both matter, but the line between those who intuit the institution’s codes and those who must painfully learn them. Its rules are never written plainly because they work best as atmosphere. Its hero system elevates the frictionless elite broker who moves through every prestige room and calls that movement service. Its hierarchy is at once old and modern, aristocratic and managerial, meritocratic in language and hereditary in feel. Harvard’s genius is not that it abolished elite reproduction. It is that it learned to stage elite reproduction as enlightened selection.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Power in the American Medical Association

High-status actors in the American Medical Association do not compete for authority by openly saying they want power. They compete by invoking moral languages that frame their authority as protecting patient welfare, safeguarding public health, and upholding the integrity of the medical profession. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions. In the AMA, the dominant vocabulary is patient safety, evidence-based medicine, professional ethics, health equity, and access to care. These terms do not merely describe goals. They create a framework in which authority claims become inseparable from care itself. The organization does not merely represent physicians. It protects patients. Whoever controls the definition of that protection controls the most powerful legitimating language available.
The American Medical Association presents itself as a professional body dedicated to advancing the science and art of medicine and improving public health. In practice it is a structured arena of elite competition organized around specialty societies, state delegations, the House of Delegates, and a network of councils and committees that shape policy. Rival coalitions do not reject the AMA’s stated mission. They compete to define what patient welfare requires, who has the authority to interpret medical evidence, and which institutional priorities should follow. The structure channels this competition toward the House of Delegates and leadership positions that influence policy agendas, making resolutions and committee control the highest-stakes battlegrounds.
Three institutions concentrate this struggle more than any others. Clinical and ethical authority, the professional regulation and scope-of-practice system, and the public policy and advocacy platform are the AMA’s master domains. Whoever governs them governs standards of care, the boundaries of the profession, and the public voice of organized medicine. What looks like debate over guidelines, licensing rules, or health policy positions is, underneath, a contest over who defines what it means to practice medicine and what obligations that practice entails.
The clinical and ethical authority system is the first and most fundamental arena because it governs the terms on which every other competition is conducted. The traditionalist-clinical autonomy coalition, concentrated among practicing physicians and many specialty societies, uses the language of physician judgment, clinical expertise, and the doctor-patient relationship. Its claim is that medical decisions must remain in the hands of trained physicians exercising professional discretion. External interference, whether from government, insurers, or bureaucratic guidelines, is framed as a threat to patient care. By framing physician judgment as uniquely capable of protecting patients, this coalition claims authority over clinical decision-making. The policymaker who imposes standardized rules is not improving care. He undermines it.
Turner’s essentialist diagnosis applies directly. The traditionalist coalition presents clinical judgment as stable and transferable expertise grounded in training and experience. But medical knowledge is constantly evolving, unevenly distributed, and subject to disagreement. What counts as best practice is shaped by institutional incentives, research trends, and professional norms. The claim of stable expertise masks the variability and contestation within medicine itself.
The AI question has forced this tension into a new configuration. By March 2026, over eighty percent of physicians report using AI in their professional work, double the rate from 2023. The AMA’s response has been to officially rebrand AI as augmented intelligence. The vocabulary is a coalition technology. By framing AI as a tool that enhances rather than replaces human judgment, the AMA ensures that the physician remains the ultimate arbiter of clinical truth. The organization pushes simultaneously for clear liability frameworks, arguing that physicians cannot trust these tools if they bear responsibility for algorithmic errors they cannot audit. The moral claim is patient safety. The jurisdictional claim is that the physician must remain in the loop. Turner’s framework reads this as a social construction under pressure. As AI becomes more integrated into triage and diagnosis, the essential difference between a machine’s data processing and what the AMA calls the physician’s clinical judgment becomes harder to specify and easier to contest.
The evidence-standardization coalition, associated with academic medicine and policy-oriented physicians, uses the language of data, outcomes, and evidence-based guidelines. Its claim is that variability in physician practice produces harm and that standardized protocols improve outcomes. The traditionalist coalition frames this as bureaucratic overreach. The standardization coalition frames it as necessary discipline. Both claim to protect patients. A pragmatic-clinical bloc occupies the middle, arguing that guidelines must inform but not replace physician judgment.
The professional regulation and scope-of-practice system is the second master domain, the one that defines who is authorized to provide medical services. In 2026 this remains the top priority for eighty-nine percent of state medical societies. The physician-protection coalition uses the language of training, safety, and quality, arguing that only physicians possess the depth of knowledge required for complex medical decisions. Expanding the scope of practice for nurse practitioners, physician assistants, or pharmacists gets framed not as a turf war but as a risk to patients. By framing scope restrictions as safety measures, the coalition converts professional boundary maintenance into moral necessity. Critics who argue for expanded roles are not proposing efficiency. They endanger patients.
The AMA manages the access-expansion coalition’s challenge partly by supporting licensure modernization for internationally trained physicians. This increases the supply of doctors without conceding authority to non-physicians. The language of the physician-led team performs the same function, presenting hierarchical professional structure as an organizational necessity rather than a boundary protection strategy. The access-expansion coalition responds with the language of care deserts and workforce crisis, arguing that rigid professional boundaries limit availability precisely where patients need it most. Each side reconstructs the same evidence on healthcare outcomes to support its preferred map of who should be allowed to do what.
The 2026 Match Day results gave the AMA a specific set of data points for this fight. The Specialties Matching Service reported that eight subspecialties filled fewer than half of their offered positions, with geriatric medicine filling only thirty-seven percent. The AMA frames these figures as an existential threat to the most vulnerable patients and uses the language of generational neglect to argue that the current system is failing its moral obligation. By converting a recruitment and compensation problem into a public safety emergency, the organization recruits allies among senior advocacy groups and child welfare organizations. The underlying issue, that cognitive and time-intensive specialties pay significantly less than procedural ones, reflects internal AMA income distribution among its own members. The organization focuses instead on the 1997 Congressional cap on Medicare-supported graduate medical education, an external target that produces a clear, unified advocacy demand without requiring physicians to address their own specialty pay hierarchy.
The advocacy around the Resident Physician Shortage Reduction Act follows the same logic. Using AAMC projections of an eighty-six-thousand-physician shortage by 2036, the AMA frames the bill’s fourteen-thousand new residency slots as an eschatological necessity for the aging population. The rural residency emphasis secures bipartisan support by translating a professional workforce expansion into a language of forgotten communities and health professional shortage areas. The public service framing converts institutional resource acquisition into a selfless act of workforce development.
The 2026 Primary Care Scorecard amplifies this across the reimbursement landscape. The report shows that national spending on primary care remains below five percent of total health expenditures despite an incremental expansion in the training pipeline, and that twenty-seven percent of adults now lack a usual source of care. The AMA uses these figures to frame the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule as an irrational system built on procedural bias, paying more for a fifteen-minute surgery than a forty-five-minute geriatric consultation. The language of true medicine converts a technical debate over relative value units into a structural indictment. The push for site-neutral payments, which would eliminate the premium Medicare pays hospital-owned clinics over independent physician offices for identical services, gets framed not as a cut to hospitals but as a leveling of the playing field. The anti-consolidation narrative presents independent practice as an essential safeguard for the doctor-patient relationship, which lets the AMA position hospital acquisition of physician practices as a threat to patients rather than a competitive outcome driven partly by physician choices.
The public policy and advocacy platform is the third master domain. The advocacy coalition uses the language of public health, social determinants, and systemic reform, arguing that medicine has an obligation to address conditions that affect health including economic inequality and access to care. Following legal challenges to DEI programs in late 2025, the AMA’s equity coalition pivoted to a vocabulary of structural marginalization and targeted universalism, a legally sanitized framework designed to achieve similar reformist goals without relying on race-conscious language that courts have restricted. By framing health equity as a scientific necessity for a multiracial democracy, the AMA converts a social justice mission into a core professional standard, making it difficult to attack the policy without appearing to attack the science of medicine itself.
The neutrality-restraint coalition uses the language of professional focus and institutional credibility, arguing that overt advocacy on contested social issues risks politicizing the organization. Each side claims to defend the profession’s integrity. Each defines that integrity differently. Both reconstruct the same institutional history to support the conclusion that theirs is the authentic version.
The overall pattern holds across all three domains. Every coalition claims authority by asserting possession of something essential. Clinicians claim judgment and experience. Academics claim evidence and data. Regulators claim safety and standards. Reformers claim access and equity. Advocates claim responsibility for public health. None presents its position as interest. All present it as necessity grounded in care.
What the AMA case shows in 2026 is a guild managing technological disruption, professional boundary pressure, and a hostile federal environment through the same mechanism it has always used. It translates institutional interest into moral language and moral language into policy demand. The physician remains essential because the AMA controls the definition of what essential means. The residency cap becomes a patient safety crisis. The site-neutral payment fight becomes a rescue plan for the vulnerable. The augmented intelligence framework keeps the algorithm subordinate. The jurisdictional struggle continues through committees, scorecards, and congressional testimony, determining who defines patient care and who has the standing to speak in its name.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Power in the American Bar Association

High-status actors in the American Bar Association do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking moral languages that frame their authority as defending the rule of law, protecting the integrity of the legal system, and serving the public interest. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions. In the ABA, the dominant vocabulary is the rule of law, judicial independence, professional responsibility, access to justice, and constitutional values. These terms do not merely describe ideals. They create a framework in which authority claims become inseparable from civic virtue. The organization does not merely represent lawyers. It safeguards the legal order. Whoever controls the definition of that safeguard controls the most powerful legitimating language available.
The American Bar Association presents itself as a voluntary professional organization dedicated to improving the law and the administration of justice. In practice it is a structured arena of elite competition organized around sections, committees, the House of Delegates, and a dense network of policy-making bodies. Rival coalitions do not reject the ABA’s stated mission. They compete to define what the rule of law requires, who has the authority to interpret that requirement, and which institutional priorities should follow. The structure channels this competition toward the House of Delegates and the leadership that shapes its agenda, making policy resolutions and committee influence the highest-stakes battlegrounds in ABA life.
Three institutions concentrate this struggle more than any others. Normative authority over legal standards, the accreditation and professional-regulation apparatus, and the policy-advocacy platform are the ABA’s master domains. Whoever governs them governs legitimacy, entry into the profession, and the public voice of organized law. What looks like debate over resolutions, ethics rules, or accreditation standards is, underneath, a contest over who defines what it means to be a lawyer and what the legal system ought to serve.
The normative authority system is the first and most fundamental arena because it governs the terms on which every other competition is conducted. The institutionalist-rule-of-law coalition, concentrated among senior practitioners, judges, and leadership figures, uses the language of neutrality, legal integrity, and constitutional order. Its claim is that the law must remain above politics, that professional norms must be preserved, and that the ABA’s role is to defend those norms against erosion. The Model Rules of Professional Conduct are treated as expressions of enduring principles rather than contested constructions. By framing these norms as neutral and foundational, this coalition claims authority over interpretation. The critic who argues that legal standards embed political choices is not offering an alternative perspective. He undermines the rule of law. The language of neutrality converts contested judgments into necessary ones.
Turner’s essentialist diagnosis applies directly. The institutionalist coalition presents legal norms as stable and transmissible across generations of lawyers. But these norms are continuously interpreted, revised, and selectively enforced. What counts as professional responsibility or judicial independence is shaped by institutional incentives, historical context, and internal debate. The claim of neutrality masks the work required to sustain agreement around these concepts.
The dispute over Standard 206, the diversity and inclusion accreditation mandate, makes this visible at full institutional scale. In February 2026, the Council of the Section of Legal Education extended the suspension of the standard through August 2027. The ABA framed this not as a retreat from values but as a defense against extreme hardship, protecting law schools from losing federal funding under executive directives targeting DEI programs. The language recruits allies among deans who fear financial penalties while buying time to reframe the underlying mandate. The proposed replacement strips away references to diversity and inclusion in favor of access to legal education and the profession, pursuing similar demographic goals through socioeconomic, first-generation, and geographic criteria. A vulnerable identity-based standard gets converted into a holistic framework that is harder to challenge under the SFFA v. Harvard precedent.
Turner’s framework reads this precisely. The current administration claims that the essence of equality is colorblindness. The ABA reconstructs that essence to mean individual adversity and socioeconomic background. Both sides draw from the same constitutional materials. Each presents its selection as the only faithful reading. What looks like a technical revision to an accreditation standard is a jurisdictional repositioning designed to survive the present political environment and re-emerge with the same objectives under a different name.
The reformist-access-to-justice coalition, concentrated among public interest lawyers, younger members, and some academics, uses the language of equity, systemic reform, and inclusion. Its claim is that the legal system does not function neutrally in practice and that the ABA must address structural inequalities in access and outcomes. The institutionalist coalition frames resistance to change as defense of stability. The reformist coalition frames change as necessary to fulfill the law’s promise. Both claim to serve justice. Both select different aspects of the legal tradition to support their positions. A professional-pragmatic bloc occupies the middle, using the language of competence, client service, and practical governance to argue that ideological conflict must be balanced against the realities of practice.
The accreditation and regulatory apparatus is the second master domain, the one that translates normative authority into control over the profession itself. The accreditation-aligned coalition uses the language of quality, rigor, and professional readiness. Its claim is that maintaining high standards protects both the profession and the public. Accreditation becomes a gatekeeping mechanism that determines who can enter the legal field. By framing this as protection rather than exclusion, the coalition converts control over entry into a moral necessity. Critics who argue that accreditation standards raise costs or limit access are not merely proposing reform. They risk the integrity of the profession.
The February 2026 decoupling of the Council of the Section of Legal Education from the broader ABA House of Delegates amplifies this. The Board of Governors approved giving the Council greater power to change its own bylaws without House approval. If the broader ABA becomes a target for federal oversight, the accreditation arm can claim it operates as an independent, neutral regulatory body, separating the political advocacy of the ABA from the technical regulation of law schools. The move is presented as an administrative modernization. Its jurisdictional logic is to create a firebreak.
The Law School Admission Council operates within this domain as a parallel power center. Recognizing that a test-optional world threatens its primary revenue, LSAC has reframed the LSAT not as a barrier but as a validity tool that protects students from enrolling in schools where they might fail. Through its LawHub platform, offering readiness courses and outcome analytics, LSAC has repositioned itself as a professional journey manager whose data schools cannot function without even if they stop requiring the test itself. The credential assembly service, the admissions data reports, and the predictive validity studies all maintain institutional dependence regardless of whether the exam remains mandatory. LSAC claims the LSAT measures the essential DNA of a successful lawyer, a stable aptitude with demonstrated predictive validity since 1945. Schools pursuing test-optional pathways argue that lawyerly aptitude includes life experience, resilience, and judgment that no logic game can measure. Both sides reconstruct the authentic applicant from the same pool of candidates, selecting the metrics that justify their own institutional role.
Under the 2026 Student Tuition and Transparency System, graduates’ median earnings must exceed those of a typical bachelor’s degree holder or the school faces loss of access to federal loan programs. The institutionalist and accreditation-aligned coalitions use the language of consumer protection and financial accountability to frame the closure of low-performing schools not as reduced access but as a quality floor. Law schools counter by invoking the citizen lawyer, arguing that a public defender’s contribution to society cannot be captured by a federal earnings metric. The language of total value converts an economic test into a broader measure of civic return. Each side claims to protect the student. Each positions its preferred metric as the necessary one.
The policy-advocacy platform is the third master domain. The public-voice coalition uses the language of civic responsibility, democratic norms, and constitutional governance. Its claim is that the ABA must take positions on issues that affect the rule of law. Silence is abdication. The neutrality-restraint coalition uses the language of nonpartisanship and institutional credibility, arguing that overt advocacy risks politicizing the organization. Each claims to defend the same core value and interprets it differently.
In early 2026, the primary battleground is a proposed Department of Justice rule that would allow the Attorney General to sideline state bar ethics investigations into federal lawyers. The DOJ frames state bar investigations as political weaponization by activist lawyers and proposes a right of first review, moving ethics jurisdiction from independent state bars to an internal DOJ process. The ABA and local bars invoke the language of state licensing authority, arguing that the power to discipline a lawyer is a non-federal process essential to protecting the public. ABA President Michelle Behnke framed DEI at the February midyear meeting not as a political preference but as a rule of law necessity, arguing that a legal system that does not reflect its people loses legitimacy. The ABA has filed a federal lawsuit against the administration naming seventy agencies and officials, accusing them of a law firm intimidation policy aimed at punishing firms that represent disfavored clients.
The ethics charges against DOJ Pardon Attorney Ed Martin filed by the D.C. Board on Professional Responsibility illustrate how this conflict reaches the level of individual lawyers. Martin stands accused of using his official capacity to coerce Georgetown University Law Center by threatening its federal funding over DEI policies. Disciplinary counsel uses the vocabulary of the oath of office to frame what might appear to be a policy dispute as a fundamental violation of legal ethics. Martin’s reported attempt to contact judges directly to demand the investigation be dismissed generated additional charges. A political conflict gets translated into a professional responsibility matter, and a professional responsibility matter gets answered with what the charging authority calls interference with the administration of justice.
The adoption of Resolution 100 in February 2026 shows how the same coalition structure operates in the technology domain. The reformist coalition framed AI as a moral imperative for closing the justice gap, arguing that overstretched legal aid attorneys need a force multiplier and that failing to adopt these tools is an abdication of the ABA’s mission. The institutionalist and pragmatic blocs countered with Model Rules 1.1 and 5.3, insisting on human supervision and warning against a two-tiered system where the poor receive hallucinating algorithms while the wealthy receive human counsel. The final resolution supports AI expansion in pro bono services but requires licensed attorney review of every AI-generated output. The profession retains its gatekeeping role. Tech companies cannot offer legal aid AI directly to the public without lawyer oversight. What looks like a technical guideline is a jurisdictional barrier dressed as consumer protection.
The overall pattern holds across all three domains. Every coalition claims authority by asserting possession of something essential. Institutionalists claim neutrality and stability. Reformers claim justice and inclusion. Regulators claim quality and protection. Advocates claim civic responsibility. None presents its position as interest. All present it as necessity grounded in the nature of law.
What the ABA case shows in 2026 is a sophisticated institutional adaptation under pressure. The organization is not abandoning its reformist goals. It translates them into the language of professional competence, institutional integrity, and access, making them harder targets for opponents to hit. The standard changes its name. The mandate survives in a different frame. The jurisdictional struggle continues through committees, data systems, and federal litigation, determining who defines the rule of law and who has the standing to speak in its name for a profession whose authority depends on convincing two audiences at once, the lawyers it represents and the public it claims to serve.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Power in Satmar

Orthodox Jews in the Satmar Hasidic community do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking moral languages that frame their authority as fidelity to Torah, loyalty to the Rebbe, and uncompromising resistance to modern corruption, above all Zionism. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions. In Satmar, the dominant vocabulary is daas Torah, the authority of the Rebbe, the sanctity of separation, and the Three Oaths that forbid Jewish sovereignty before the messianic age. These are not merely beliefs. They create a framework in which authority claims become inseparable from cosmic obedience. The community does not merely exist to preserve tradition. It exists to survive exile faithfully. Whoever controls the definition of that faithfulness controls the most powerful legitimating language available.

Satmar presents itself as a unified Hasidic court grounded in strict adherence to halacha and the teachings of its founding leader, Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum. In practice it is a structured arena of elite competition organized around dynastic leadership, communal institutions, and geographic strongholds in Williamsburg and Kiryas Joel. Rival coalitions do not reject Satmar’s core commitments. They compete to define what loyalty to the Rebbe requires, who has the authority to interpret his legacy, and how communal resources should be governed. The structure channels this competition toward control of the Rebbe’s court and its associated institutions, making succession and institutional governance the highest-stakes battlegrounds in Satmar life.

Three institutions concentrate this struggle more than any others. Dynastic authority centered on the Rebbe, the communal administrative network, and the education and welfare system are Satmar’s master domains. Whoever governs them governs interpretation, coordination, and the daily life of a large and insular population. What looks like disputes over succession, school policy, or municipal governance is, underneath, a contest over who defines authentic Satmar identity and therefore who belongs within the community.

The dynastic authority system is the first and most fundamental arena because it governs the terms on which every other competition is conducted. The Rebbe is not simply a leader. He is the living conduit of authority, the interpreter of Torah, and the embodiment of the community’s spiritual direction. The succession dispute between Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum, based in Kiryas Joel, and Rabbi Zalman Leib Teitelbaum, based in Williamsburg, has produced two rival courts, each claiming to represent the true continuation of Satmar, each controlling a share of what observers estimate as a global institutional network worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The claim is not that one leader is more effective. It is that one is the rightful heir to a sacred chain.

Pinsof’s framework makes the jurisdictional move visible. By framing authority as dynastic continuity, each coalition claims exclusive jurisdiction over the founding Rebbe’s legacy. The rival is not merely mistaken. He is illegitimate. The appeal to lineage functions as a coalition technology that stabilizes authority by tying it to an inherited position rather than a contestable argument. Because New York courts have largely declined to rule on religious leadership, each coalition has built its own parallel master institutions, and the competition has settled into a stable equilibrium of total separation.

The Aaronim use the language of organizational growth and municipal sovereignty. The successful incorporation of the Town of Palm Tree in 2019, the first officially recognized ultra-Orthodox municipality in the United States, converted an administrative victory into a moral claim. Their leader provides the shield necessary for communal survival. Within Palm Tree, the language of daas Torah justifies high-density zoning and rapid construction. Opposing a building project the Rebbe directs is not a disagreement over urban planning. It is rebellion against the spiritual head of the community. By tying the most basic material need, shelter, to the Rebbe’s administrative authority, the coalition ensures that young families dependent on affordable housing become structurally loyal to the dynastic claim.

The Zalmanim counter with the language of historical custody. By holding the Rodney Street synagogue and the Der Yid newspaper, they frame themselves as guardians of the original Satmar essence, the physical and textual soil where the founding Rebbe lived, prayed, and wrote. Their claim is not institutional success but proximity to origins.

Turner’s essentialist diagnosis applies directly. Each faction presents its version of Satmar as the faithful transmission of a unified teaching. But the writings of Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum are vast and internally complex. Each coalition selects different emphases while presenting that selection as the seamless continuation of a whole. The Aaronim emphasize his vision of communal sovereignty. The Zalmanim emphasize his rootedness in historic Brooklyn. Both claim the same man.

The communal administrative structure is the second master domain, translating spiritual authority into practical control. Satmar operates extensive systems of housing, welfare distribution, and local governance. In Kiryas Joel and Palm Tree, communal leadership overlaps with municipal authority in ways that make the distinction between religious governance and civil administration nearly invisible. The centralized-communal coalition uses the language of protection, separation, and communal survival. Governance becomes a form of spiritual defense. The autonomy-resistance coalition, emerging in response to perceived overreach, uses the language of fairness and internal justice. These disputes rarely challenge the principle of strong leadership. They challenge who exercises it.

The battle over New York State’s substantial equivalence laws for secular education in yeshivas runs through this domain with particular force. Satmar leaders frame any state mandate for math and English instruction as an existential threat to the soul of the Jewish people. They use the language of mesirah, the prohibition against informing on fellow Jews to outside authorities, to suppress internal dissent. Turner’s framework reads this clearly. The preservation coalition claims that the essence of Satmar is a total rejection of secular knowledge. But the founding Rebbe was more pragmatic than this framing admits. He navigated secular law and political alliances when necessary. The current insistence on total educational isolation is a selective reconstruction, chosen because it mobilizes the community against state interference and concentrates parental dependence on communal institutions.

A small but growing professionalized-pragmatic bloc uses the language of responsible citizenship and legal strategy to protect Satmar institutions through American constitutional frameworks, free exercise, parental rights, and administrative law. The traditionalist leadership manages this by framing such litigation as shtadlanus, the historic Jewish practice of intercession with gentile authorities. Speaking the language of the captors, the argument goes, is not compromise. It is the ancient art of protecting the holy sheep. The framing converts legal maneuvering into an act of fidelity.

The education and welfare network is the third master domain, where doctrinal authority and administrative control shape everyday life. Satmar schools enforce strict separation from secular culture and reproduce the community’s norms across generations. The insularity-preservation coalition uses the language of purity, modesty, and protection of the soul. The engagement-pressure coalition, arising from legal challenges and individual dissent, uses the language of rights and economic opportunity. It operates under severe constraint because the dominant moral vocabulary treats its claims as threats to communal integrity.

Technology has become the newest front in all three domains at once. The schism between the Aaronim and Zalmanim has extended into the digital realm, where each faction mandates different kosher filtering software to police internet access. In 2026 the choice of filter, such as those provided by the Technology Awareness Group, serves as a digital uniform. A parent in a Zalmanite school found using an Aaronim-approved filter commits not a technical error but an act of jurisdictional defection. The Acceptance Card system enforces this at the school gate. Parents seeking enrollment must sign an affidavit confirming their devices have been inspected and stamped by community technology enforcers. The school becomes a checkpoint for digital compliance, and the Rebbe’s jurisdiction extends into the pocket of every parent.

The double-phone economy persists. Businessmen carry one kosher device for communal visibility and a second, unmonitored phone for business. Leadership tolerates this as long as the private device does not produce public challenge to the Rebbe’s authority. The moral necessity of the kosher device governs the communal square. What happens in the private economy is managed rather than eliminated.

Generative AI has intensified all of this. In early 2026, leading rabbinical figures including Elya Ber Wachtfogel framed AI as a dire threat and a push by Satan to mislead the Jewish people before the Messiah’s arrival. A new vocabulary has emerged comparing AI to the biblical figure of Esau, who addressed Jacob as brother while planning his destruction. AI brings the knowledge of every secular university directly into the Jewish home, bypassing parental and rabbinical oversight. That framing converts an information technology into an eschatological weapon, and it recruits allies among parents already primed to fear the outside world.

Turner’s analysis applies here as directly as anywhere in this series. Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum died before the internet existed. The essence of total separation from secular information that his warnings are said to require is a reconstruction. The leadership maps his general cautions about secular books and newspapers onto 5G networks and large language models to maintain the appearance of continuous transmission. What is presented as faithful application of a timeless teaching is, in Turner’s terms, institutional work performed on materials that cannot speak back.

The response to AI has followed the same arc as the response to the internet a decade earlier. A total ban proved unenforceable. In 2026 several filtered large language models, KosherGPT and RavGPT among them, have been released with heresies, secular history, and immodest content removed. Rabbinical boards have shifted from trying to stop the technology to branding it. The community gains the productivity of AI while the essence of information remains under rabbinical jurisdiction. The January 2026 exposure of an AI-generated Hasidic rabbi named Menachem Goldberg on TikTok gave the leadership a gift. They used it to argue that AI is a fake prophet lacking human judgment and soul, which chilled reform-oriented attempts to use AI tools for pastoral counseling and reinforced the irreplaceable authority of the living Rebbe.

Anti-Zionism remains the most powerful stabilizing coalition technology across both courts. In recent addresses, Rabbi Zalman has referred to the State of Israel as this generation’s Amalek. The language does not merely describe a political position. It functions as a loyalty test. By forbidding members from accepting money from Zionist organizations or participating in Israeli elections, Satmar leaders ensure that followers remain entirely dependent on the community’s own welfare and education networks. Sacred separation launders institutional control as a requirement for cosmic redemption.

The overall pattern holds. Every coalition claims authority by asserting possession of something essential. Dynastic leaders claim authentic succession. Communal administrators claim the capacity to protect the group. Educators claim responsibility for transmitting purity. The pragmatic bloc claims legal competence in defense of the whole. None presents its position as interest. All present it as necessity grounded in Torah and survival.

What the Satmar case shows that the others in this series do not is a jurisdictional war that has already reached formal partition. The two courts do not compete to win each other over. They compete to monopolize the definition of Satmar for their respective territories. The filter is the fence. In a world where physical separation grows harder to maintain as economic necessity pushes members into contact with the outside, the smartphone filter, the Acceptance Card, and the approved AI tool are the new eruv, the boundary that defines who is in and who is out. The jurisdictional struggle continues not toward resolution but toward the consolidation of two parallel worlds, each claiming to be the only one.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Power in Eastern Orthodox Christianity

High-status actors in Eastern Orthodoxy do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking moral languages that frame their authority as fidelity to Holy Tradition, continuity with the Church Fathers, and preservation of the apostolic faith. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions. In Orthodoxy, the dominant vocabulary is Holy Tradition, apostolic succession, conciliarity, and the faith once delivered. These are not merely theological claims. They structure a world in which authority is inseparable from continuity. The Church does not develop doctrine in the modern sense. It preserves what has been handed down. Whoever controls the definition of that continuity controls the most powerful legitimating language available.
Eastern Orthodoxy presents itself as a unified communion grounded in shared doctrine, liturgy, and sacramental life. In practice it is a decentralized arena of elite competition organized around autocephalous churches, each governed by its own synod of bishops and none subordinated to a single earthly head. Rival coalitions do not reject this structure. They compete within it to define what fidelity to tradition requires, who has authority to interpret that tradition, and how jurisdiction should be exercised across national and transnational boundaries. What appears as theological disagreement or disputes over jurisdiction is, underneath, a contest over who speaks for Orthodoxy itself.
Three institutions concentrate this struggle more than any others. Doctrinal-traditional authority, the synodal system of governance, and the nexus of national churches and monastic-intellectual centers are Orthodoxy’s master domains. Whoever governs them governs continuity, coordination, and the interpretation of the faith across a global communion tied together without centralization. What looks like debates over councils, recognition of new churches, or relations with other Christians is, underneath, a contest over who defines the living tradition.
The doctrinal-traditional authority system is the first and most fundamental arena because it governs the terms on which every other competition is conducted. The traditionalist-conservative coalition, concentrated among senior bishops, monastic communities, and theologians rooted in patristic scholarship, uses the language of Holy Tradition, the Fathers, and fidelity to the ecumenical councils. Its claim is that Orthodoxy does not innovate. It transmits. The teachings of the first millennium are not historical artifacts. They are binding expressions of truth. To reinterpret them in light of modern conditions is not development. It is deviation.
Pinsof’s framework makes the jurisdictional move visible. By framing truth as already given and fully present in tradition, this coalition claims authority over interpretation. The theologian who introduces historical criticism or contextual adaptation is not offering a new perspective. He steps outside the tradition. The appeal to the Fathers functions as a coalition technology. It anchors authority in a past that cannot answer back, allowing present actors to speak in its name.
Turner’s essentialist diagnosis applies with particular force. The traditionalist coalition claims that a determinate body of truth has been faithfully preserved across centuries through apostolic succession and conciliar affirmation. But this transmission is mediated through human institutions, selections, and interpretations. The Fathers themselves disagreed. Councils resolved conflicts by excluding alternatives. What counts as the tradition is always a curated inheritance presented as a seamless whole.
The conflict between the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the Moscow Patriarchate over Ukraine makes this visible at a scale that has not been seen in centuries. On January 6, 2026, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew framed his support for the Orthodox Church of Ukraine not as a political alignment but as an entirely ecclesiological duty, arguing that every sovereign state has the right to an independent local church. The language of spiritual justice converts a territorial grant into a canonical obligation. Moscow counters with a traditionalist-national vocabulary, framing the Ecumenical Patriarch as an instrument of foreign intelligence services. The Moscow Patriarchate uses the language of canonical violation to justify breaking Eucharistic communion, which forces every other autocephalous church to choose sides. A dispute over territory becomes a test of Holy Tradition. That transformation is Pinsof’s coalition technology in its most consequential form.
The reform-engagement coalition, often smaller and more regionally concentrated, uses the language of pastoral necessity, engagement with modernity, and the living character of tradition. Its claim is that fidelity requires discernment, not repetition. The tradition is alive and must respond to new conditions. The traditionalist coalition frames resistance to change as defense of the faith. The engagement coalition frames adaptation as faithfulness to the same faith in new circumstances. Both claim continuity. Both select different elements of the past to support incompatible conclusions.
The 2033 Jubilee, commemorating the bimillennium of the Redemption, has already become a target for this competition. In February 2026, leading figures including Cardinal Kurt Koch and several Orthodox theologians noted that Moscow refuses to attend ecumenical meetings where Constantinople is present. Proponents of unity use the language of visible unity, pointing to joint Sunday of Orthodoxy services in the United States, to argue that the world must see a church that holds together. The Moscow bloc answers by framing that unity as betrayal, arguing that communion with what it calls schismatics in the OCU has placed the Ecumenical Patriarchate itself outside the tradition. Each side selects from the same historical inheritance. Each presents its selection as the only faithful reading.
A pastoral-synodal bloc occupies the middle position. It uses the language of unity, conciliarity, and balance to argue that tensions must be managed through councils rather than resolved through unilateral assertion. Its claim is that Orthodoxy survives precisely because no single authority can impose a final interpretation. This bloc is strongest when conflicts threaten schism and weakest when rival coalitions push for decisive recognition or exclusion. The death of Patriarch Ilia II of Georgia in early 2026 removed one of its most significant figures. Ilia II served as a bridge between the Greek and Slavic worlds, and his absence forces the Georgian Church into a succession contest that will function as a proxy battle between the pro-Constantinople and pro-Moscow coalitions. Every candidate for the Georgian patriarchal throne will frame his platform not as a political choice but as the only path that preserves the balance of the Holy Synod.
The synodal governance structure is the second master domain. Authority resides in councils of bishops rather than a single head, with each bishop governing his own diocese while remaining in communion with others. The ecumenical patriarch holds the position of first among equals, a title of honor without direct authority over other churches. By framing authority as conciliar rather than centralized, Orthodoxy converts fragmentation into legitimacy. Disagreement is not failure. It is evidence that no single actor can claim total control. The language of conciliarity presents distributed power as fidelity to early Christian practice.
The jurisdictional-national coalition operates within this structure using the language of canonical territory, historical continuity, and national identity. Its claim is that each autocephalous church has rightful authority over its geographic and cultural domain. The struggle has expanded into the Baltic states, where the Ecumenical Patriarchate is drawing parishes away from Moscow’s jurisdiction. In early 2026 the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service published a text using sacred language to frame this church contest as a national cause, calling the Ecumenical Patriarch an antichrist in a cassock. The move raises the cost of defection for Moscow-aligned clergy. Both sides claim to represent the true canonical order in the region. Moscow points to centuries of historic oversight. Constantinople points to its role as the Mother Church with a unique right to mediate and restore peace. Each selects the historical documents that support its current map of jurisdiction. Turner’s framework reads this as the standard operation: two coalitions mining the same archive for incompatible conclusions, each presenting its selection as faithful recovery of the whole.
The transnational-ecumenical coalition responds to all of this with the language of unity and global coordination. Its claim is that fragmentation along national lines undermines the universal character of the Church. The tension between these positions reflects a structural feature that no amount of coalition maneuvering can dissolve. Orthodoxy is both universal and national at once, and each coalition emphasizes one pole while claiming fidelity to both.
The monastic and intellectual network is the third master domain, where doctrinal authority and spiritual prestige intersect. Monastic communities, particularly those associated with Mount Athos, carry immense symbolic authority as guardians of spiritual authenticity. The ascetic-traditional coalition uses the language of holiness, prayer, and spiritual purity. Its claim is that true authority comes not from administrative position but from spiritual formation. The academic-theological coalition, linked to seminaries and universities, uses the language of scholarship, historical understanding, and theological clarity. Each side claims access to what Orthodoxy truly is. Each reconstructs that essence from shared materials while presenting its version as the one that has not been distorted by interest.
The overall pattern holds. Every coalition claims authority by asserting possession of something essential. Traditionalists claim fidelity to the Fathers. National churches claim canonical legitimacy. Ecumenical actors claim universal unity. Monastics claim spiritual authenticity. Theologians claim interpretive clarity. None presents its position as interest. All present it as necessity grounded in the nature of the Church.
What distinguishes the Orthodox case in 2026 is not simply the Ukrainian schism but the broader theologizing of security and intelligence. What were once technical canonical disputes now travel in the language of counterintelligence and existential threat. The SVR cites ecclesiology. Patriarchal statements get read as geopolitical signals. This fusion makes the bridging work of the pastoral-synodal bloc nearly impossible, because the vocabulary of managed tension cannot compete with the vocabulary of civilizational survival. Eastern Orthodoxy is governed not by a single unified authority but by competing coalitions operating within a conciliar and decentralized system that has no mechanism for final resolution. The jurisdictional struggles continue across synods and patriarchates, determining who defines Holy Tradition and who has the standing to speak in its name for a communion that has no center and therefore no final arbiter.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Power in the Southern Baptist Convention

High-status actors in the Southern Baptist Convention do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking moral languages that frame their authority as faithfulness to Scripture, defense of the gospel, or stewardship of evangelistic mission. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions. In Southern Baptist life, the dominant vocabulary is biblical inerrancy, the authority of Scripture, the gospel, the Great Commission, religious liberty, and the autonomy of the local church. These terms do not merely describe beliefs. They structure a framework in which authority claims become inseparable from fidelity to God’s word. The convention does not merely exist to coordinate churches. It exists to proclaim the gospel and guard the truth. Whoever controls the definition of that truth controls the most powerful legitimating language available.
The Southern Baptist Convention presents itself as a voluntary association of autonomous churches united by shared confession and mission. In practice it is a structured arena of elite competition organized around an annual meeting, a dense network of seminaries, mission boards, and committees, and a system of trustee governance that determines institutional direction. Rival coalitions do not reject the basic Baptist commitments to local autonomy and cooperation. They compete to define what those commitments require, who has the authority to interpret them, and which institutional priorities should follow. The structure channels this competition toward the annual meeting, where messengers elect a president who appoints key committees that shape trustee selection. What appears as procedural voting is, underneath, a contest over long-term control of the convention’s institutions.
Three institutions concentrate this struggle more than any others. Confessional authority, the trustee system that governs national entities, and the seminary-mission network are the convention’s master domains. Whoever governs them governs doctrine, institutional leadership, and the allocation of resources across one of the largest Protestant bodies in the United States. What looks like debate over resolutions, bylaws, or public statements is, underneath, a contest over who defines Southern Baptist identity and therefore who belongs within its cooperative framework.
The confessional authority system is the first and most fundamental arena because it governs the terms on which every other competition is conducted. The conservative-confessional coalition, historically associated with the late twentieth-century conservative resurgence and its institutional heirs, uses the language of biblical inerrancy, doctrinal fidelity, and theological clarity. Its claim is that the Bible is without error and that the convention must be governed by those who affirm and defend this truth without compromise. The Baptist Faith and Message is treated not as a loose guideline but as a binding expression of orthodoxy. To reinterpret or soften these commitments in light of academic trends or cultural pressure is not development. It is capitulation.
Pinsof’s framework makes the jurisdictional move visible. By framing doctrine as fixed and grounded in the inerrant text, this coalition claims authority over interpretation. The theologian who introduces nuance, the pastor who emphasizes ambiguity, or the institutional leader who tolerates doctrinal diversity is not offering an alternative perspective. He weakens the foundation. The language of inerrancy functions as a coalition technology that draws a hard boundary. It converts interpretive disagreement into a test of faithfulness.
The Law Amendment battle makes this concrete. The proposed constitutional change would bar any church with women holding a pastoral title from participation in the convention. At the 2025 annual meeting, it received sixty-one percent of messenger votes but failed to reach the two-thirds supermajority required for constitutional change. Proponents used the language of clarity and integrity, arguing that the Baptist Faith and Message already prohibits women pastors and that the constitution should reflect this to guide the Credentials Committee. The conservative-confessional coalition presented the amendment not as a power consolidation but as an alignment of governing documents with settled doctrine. Those who opposed it, including Executive Committee CEO Jeff Iorg, deployed a counter-vocabulary of legal risk and institutional exposure, arguing that the amendment would hand authority to attorneys and insurance companies rather than theologians and pastors. That framing targeted the pastoral-pragmatic bloc, the group most sensitive to the costs of structural conflict, and tried to peel it away from the amendment’s supporters. Both sides claimed to be defending the convention. Neither framed its position as institutional interest.
Stephen Turner’s essentialist diagnosis applies directly. The conservative coalition claims that a determinate body of truth is clearly given in Scripture and can be faithfully transmitted through proper teaching and institutional control. Turner’s response is that even claims of scriptural clarity are mediated by interpretation, selection, and institutional reinforcement. What counts as the plain meaning of Scripture is never self-evident. It is constructed through preaching, seminary training, denominational literature, and shared habits of reading. The assertion of fixed meaning masks the work required to sustain that meaning across time.
The contextual-engagement coalition, concentrated among some pastors, seminary faculty, and younger leaders, uses the language of mission, cultural engagement, and gospel application. Its claim is that fidelity to Scripture requires contextual wisdom, that emphasis matters as much as formulation, and that the convention must adapt its posture to remain effective in a changing society. Debates over race, gender roles, abuse response, and political alignment illustrate this tension. The conservative coalition frames resistance to change as defense of truth. The engagement coalition frames adaptation as faithfulness to the gospel’s mission. Both claim biblical authority. Both select different passages, themes, and precedents to support their positions.
The Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission sits at the center of this contested ground. Following the resignation of Brent Leatherwood in 2025, the agency operates under interim leadership as it shapes its 2026 policy agenda. Motions to abolish the ERLC entirely have come from the convention’s right flank, whose coalition argues the agency has misrepresented Southern Baptists on issues including gun policy and the criminal prosecution of abortion. The ERLC defends its existence by invoking religious liberty and human dignity, terms that carry deep roots in Baptist identity. By anchoring its 2026 agenda in the Baptist Faith and Message, the agency uses a confessional shield, arguing that eliminating the commission would silence the gospel in the public square. The move is characteristic. An institutional actor under pressure reaches for the most unassailable vocabulary available and presents its survival as a theological necessity.
A pastoral-pragmatic bloc occupies the middle position. It uses the language of cooperation, evangelism, and unity to argue that doctrinal conflict must be managed rather than escalated. Its claim is that the convention’s effectiveness depends on maintaining enough shared ground to support missions, church planting, and institutional stability. This bloc is strongest among leaders responsible for keeping churches connected to the cooperative program and least powerful when doctrinal or political disputes force clear alignments.
The trustee system is the second master domain, and the one that gives Southern Baptist politics its distinctive form. Trustees govern seminaries, mission boards, and other entities, selected through processes shaped by convention leadership. The centralized-influence coalition uses the language of accountability, stewardship, and doctrinal integrity. Its claim is that institutions must be protected from drift through careful selection of trustees who will guard orthodoxy. By framing trustee control as stewardship rather than power, this coalition converts institutional governance into moral responsibility. Those who seek broader representation or looser oversight are not merely proposing a different governance model. They risk doctrinal compromise. The language of accountability launders strategic control as faithful oversight.
The autonomy-emphasis coalition responds with the language of local church independence and Baptist identity. Its claim is that excessive centralization undermines the very principle that defines the convention. The distinction between cooperation and control is itself a jurisdictional claim, and the fight over who draws that line is never merely procedural.
The seminary and mission network is the third master domain, where doctrinal and administrative struggles translate into training, sending, and funding. The sexual abuse reform fight runs through all three domains at once. Messengers voted in 2022 to create a Ministry Check database, a centralized record of credibly accused ministers. As of 2026 the database sits effectively dormant, delayed by legal and financial obstacles. Institutional leaders have shifted the language from centralized accountability to equipping local churches, redirecting the emphasis toward training and existing criminal databases. The move preserves the surface commitment to safety while protecting local autonomy and limiting institutional liability. Leaders frame this as walking with the wounded. Turner’s framework reads it as the institutional apparatus selecting the version of reform that preserves its jurisdictional structure. The mission-driven coalition claims urgency. The professionalized-institutional coalition claims competence. Both reconstruct the same mandate from the same 2022 vote while reaching opposite conclusions about what it requires.
The overall pattern holds across all three domains. Every coalition claims authority by asserting possession of something essential. Conservatives claim fidelity to inerrant Scripture. Engagement-oriented leaders claim insight into effective mission. Institutional actors claim the ability to maintain doctrinal and organizational integrity. Advocates of autonomy claim fidelity to Baptist principles. None presents its position as interest. All present it as necessity.
What distinguishes the Southern Baptist case is the tension between formal decentralization and practical centralization. The convention insists on local church autonomy while simultaneously building powerful national institutions. Authority must therefore be exercised through elections, appointments, and influence rather than direct command, which channels conflict into procedural battles that determine who controls institutional mechanisms over time. The 2026 annual meeting in Orlando is the next equilibrium point. Every candidate for the presidency or the Resolutions Committee will present his platform not as a bid for power but as stewardship of the convention’s Great Commission soul. That is not cynicism. It is how the system works.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Power Among the Mormons

High-status actors in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking moral languages that frame their authority as faithfulness to revelation, loyalty to priesthood order, or responsibility for the gathering of Israel. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions. In Mormonism, the dominant vocabulary is priesthood keys, continuing revelation, sustaining the Brethren, the covenant path, eternal families, and the kingdom of God. These terms do not merely describe belief. They structure a world in which authority claims are inseparable from salvation. The church does not merely serve its members. It exists to administer saving ordinances and prepare a people for the return of Christ. Whoever controls the meaning of that preparation controls the most powerful legitimating language available.
The LDS Church presents itself as a unified global body grounded in restored authority and living prophets. In practice it is a structured arena of elite competition organized around the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles at its apex and extending downward through a tightly ordered hierarchy of seventies, area presidencies, stake presidents, bishops, and an extensive institutional network. Rival coalitions do not reject the core truth claims or the hierarchy. They compete to define what fidelity to the Restoration requires, who has the authority to interpret that fidelity, and which institutional priorities should follow. The structure channels this competition upward, making control over interpretation, emphasis, and enforcement at the top the decisive prize.
Three institutions concentrate this struggle more than any others. Prophetic-doctrinal authority, the centralized administrative system shaped by correlation, and the temple-family-education-welfare network form Mormonism’s master domains. Whoever governs them governs belief, coordination, and the deployment of resources across a global church. What appears as doctrinal clarification, handbook revision, or institutional policy is, underneath, a contest over who defines Mormonism and therefore who belongs to the covenant people.
The doctrinal authority system is the first and most fundamental arena because it sets the terms for every other dispute. The conservative restorationist coalition, concentrated in the apostolic center, orthodox teaching traditions, and much of the core membership, uses the language of priesthood keys, prophetic continuity, and revealed order. Its claim is that Mormonism is not an evolving theological project but a restored structure of authority and doctrine given through Joseph Smith and maintained through authorized succession. Change is legitimate only when it comes through the proper channels. To reinterpret doctrine from outside that chain is not development. It is departure.
Pinsof’s framework makes the jurisdictional move visible. By framing doctrine as revelation tied to priesthood authority, this coalition claims exclusive control over interpretation. The historian who emphasizes discontinuity, the intellectual who stresses cultural context, or the member who appeals to conscience against institutional teaching is not offering an alternative view. He steps outside the order that defines legitimate knowledge. Continuing revelation appears flexible, but it is tightly bounded. Revelation continues, but only through those who hold the keys. This preserves the possibility of change while protecting centralized authority.
Recent revisions to General Handbook Section 38.6.23 illustrate how this works at the policy level. By defining gender strictly as biological sex at birth, the centralized leadership reinforces a boundary that limits the jurisdiction of the contextual-developmental coalition. The policy frames social transitioning, changing pronouns, dress, or name, not as a personal or medical matter but as a violation of priesthood order, resulting in membership restrictions including loss of a temple recommend. The language of divine identity and biological sex recruits allies in the conservative base. The contextual-developmental coalition responds by arguing that ongoing revelation should allow a more expansive understanding of gender. The institutional center answers by framing the restriction as a defense of the Plan of Happiness, converting a policy decision into an eschatological necessity. That is the coalition technology at full operation.
Stephen Turner’s essentialist diagnosis applies with particular force. The conservative coalition claims that a determinate restored order has been transmitted from the founding moment to the present through a living chain of authority. Turner’s response is that all such transmission is mediated. Mormon doctrine is not a fixed deposit but a historically layered inheritance shaped by selection, emphasis, and institutional need. Early plural marriage, priesthood restrictions by race, shifts in temple practice, and changing public language all show that what is presented as continuity is always structured by interpretation. The claim to preserve an essence is itself a product of institutional work.
The temple endowment revisions of 2023 and 2024 make Turner’s point concrete. The ceremony was shortened by roughly twenty percent, redundant phrases removed, and the visual emphasis redirected toward Jesus Christ. The conservative coalition presents these as adjustments that return the ritual to its true purpose. Turner’s framework reads them differently. The removal of the requirement for women to veil their faces, and the excision of warnings against loud laughter, get framed as modern revelation. Beneath that framing, the changes serve the professionalized coalition’s need for institutional viability by making the endowment less jarring to contemporary sensibilities. The Jesus-centered pivot is the most elegant move. By linking every covenant explicitly to the Savior, the center uses a moral vocabulary that no coalition can openly oppose, which allows significant structural change while maintaining the appearance of static, revealed truth.
The contextual-developmental coalition, concentrated among scholars, intellectuals, and younger or more globally situated members, uses the language of ongoing revelation, historical awareness, and pastoral responsiveness. Its claim is that Mormonism has always adapted and that fidelity may require reinterpreting past teachings in light of new conditions. Questions about gender, sexuality, race, historical transparency, and the limits of dissent illustrate this tension. The conservative coalition frames resistance to change as fidelity to divine order. The developmental coalition frames change as the natural unfolding of a living church. Both claim the Restoration. Both draw from the same history while emphasizing different elements.
The garment policy announced in 2024, authorizing sleeveless and slip-style temple garments for hot and humid climates such as Kenya and Uganda, with a United States rollout planned for late 2025, shows the local-adaptive coalition winning a limited but visible concession. The centralized leadership frames the change not as a concession to fashion or comfort but as caring for the saints and mission-driven pragmatism. The garment is itself a coalition technology because it signals belonging. Altering its form creates tension for the conservative coalition, who treat the standard of modesty as a fixed essence. The leadership manages this by insisting that the covenant is the stable core while the clothing is the adaptive form. The distinction preserves the grammar of essentialism while making the practical accommodation the center had reason to make anyway.
A pastoral-pragmatic bloc occupies the middle position. It uses the language of unity, ministering, retention, and family stability. Its claim is that tensions must be managed rather than forced to resolution, that the church’s strength depends on holding together a diverse membership under a shared structure, and that both rigid enforcement and rapid change risk fragmentation. This bloc is strongest among local leaders and institutionally committed members who must make the system work in practice.
The centralized administrative structure is the second master domain. Correlation created a system in which curriculum, messaging, and organizational life are tightly coordinated from the center. The centralized leadership coalition uses the language of unity, order, and global consistency. Its claim is that a worldwide church cannot function if local variation undermines coherence. Unity is not simply efficient. It is evidence of divine governance. By presenting centralization as priesthood order rather than administrative preference, this coalition turns compliance into spiritual duty. Local experimentation, intellectual independence, or public dissent get framed not as alternative approaches but as threats to the integrity of the system. The language of sustaining leaders performs the same function, transforming institutional loyalty into moral obligation.
The temple-family-education-welfare network is the third master domain. Temples, missionary work, education systems, and welfare programs define Mormon life as a comprehensive form. The temple-family coalition uses the language of eternal families, sacred ordinances, and covenant identity. Its claim is that these institutions are not peripheral. They are the core of the faith, and all governance must align with them. The professionalized institutional coalition, strongest among administrators, educators, and global managers, uses the language of excellence, credibility, and institutional viability. Its argument is that the church’s institutions must function effectively in the broader world. Accreditation, legal compliance, and public reputation are not secondary concerns. They are conditions of influence and survival.
The overall pattern holds across all three domains. Every coalition claims authority by asserting possession of something essential. Restorationists claim fidelity to revealed order. Developmental thinkers claim access to the living process of revelation. Central administrators claim the capacity to coordinate a global church. Local actors claim contextual understanding. Institutional leaders claim either mission purity or functional excellence. None presents its position as interest. All present it as necessity.
What distinguishes the LDS case is the fusion of prophetic authority with bureaucratic control. Charisma and administration reinforce each other. This makes challenges to the system difficult to sustain internally. Disagreement gets redirected, muted, or pushed to the margins rather than resolved through open institutional contest. Continuing revelation serves as the final trump in every jurisdictional dispute because the First Presidency and the Twelve can invoke it to close an argument that no other mechanism can close. The recent policy moves on gender identity, temple ceremony, and garments are not random. They are calculated maneuvers in an ongoing jurisdictional contest, each one dressed in the language of divine guidance, each one serving the coalition interests that the language of divine guidance was always designed to protect.

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