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Some drives should have veto power in specific situations — define these in advance.
Governance structures that can evolve as the organization grows and changes. Most organizational governance is static — designed once and changed only through major reorganization efforts. Adaptive governance is governance that includes its own mechanisms for evolution: regular review, experimentation with governance alternatives, and the ability to modify governance structures without requiring a governance crisis. The organization that can change how it governs itself has the meta-capability required for genuine sovereignty — it is not bound by inherited structures but can consciously design and redesign the structures through which it operates.
Decisions proceed unless someone has a substantiated objection — faster than consensus, more inclusive than authority. Consent-based decision-making occupies the middle ground between two common extremes: consensus (everyone must agree) and authority (one person decides). In consent-based decision-making, a proposal proceeds unless someone presents a reasoned, substantiated objection — not a preference, not a concern, but an objection backed by evidence that the proposal would cause harm or move the organization backward. This approach produces decisions that are good enough for now and safe enough to try — enabling organizational velocity while maintaining collective intelligence.