Decisions must consider enduring impact.

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Purpose

This principle requires decision-makers to look beyond immediate outcomes and examine long-term consequences.

Principle

Decisions must consider enduring impact.

Meaning

Actions taken today may influence land, governance, resources, and authority for many generations. Responsible leadership requires awareness of duration, reversibility, and cumulative effect.

Time is part of the law.

What Counts as Enduring

  • Effects that last beyond the present leadership.
  • Changes difficult or impossible to undo.
  • Commitments binding future generations.
  • Loss of options or flexibility.

Why This Matters

  • Prevents short-term gain from causing lasting harm.
  • Protects legitimacy of future governance.
  • Encourages restraint.
  • Strengthens continuity.

Considering Impact

Decision-makers may ask:

  • How long will this last?
  • Who will live with it?
  • Can it be reversed?
  • What might be lost?

These questions protect those not present.

Examples

  • Long-term land alteration.
  • Agreements limiting future authority.
  • Loss of language or practice.
  • Resource depletion.

If Ignored

  • Future leaders inherit constraints.
  • Restoration may be costly or impossible.
  • Trust across generations weakens.

Safeguards

  • Build in review and adjustment.
  • Seek wide counsel.
  • Document intent.
  • Avoid irreversible commitments where possible.

Cross-references

Notes

Future development may include assessment tools and criteria.

Source Citations