Expanded Authority
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An Expanded Authority is a delegated power that extends beyond its original scope to enable broader decision-making or actions.
- AKA: Extended Authority, Broadened Authority, Amplified Authority.
- Context:
- It can typically grant Extended Decision-Making Power through expanded jurisdiction.
- It can typically enable Broader Action Range through expanded operational boundary.
- It can typically override Standard Protocol through expanded discretionary power.
- It can typically transcend Original Limitation through expanded mandate.
- It can typically authorize New Initiative through expanded responsibility.
- ...
- It can often emerge from Crisis Situation through expanded emergency power.
- It can often result from Strategic Reorganization through expanded organizational structure.
- It can often develop through Gradual Evolution through expanded precedent.
- It can often require Explicit Documentation through expanded authority agreement.
- ...
- It can range from being a Temporary Expanded Authority to being a Permanent Expanded Authority, depending on its expanded authority duration.
- It can range from being a Narrow Expanded Authority to being a Comprehensive Expanded Authority, depending on its expanded authority scope.
- It can range from being a Formal Expanded Authority to being an Informal Expanded Authority, depending on its expanded authority documentation.
- It can range from being a Delegated Expanded Authority to being an Assumed Expanded Authority, depending on its expanded authority origin.
- ...
- It can have Expanded Authority Boundary for expanded authority limits.
- It can perform Expanded Authority Function with expanded authority tools.
- It can provide Expanded Authority Value for expanded authority stakeholders.
- It can maintain Expanded Authority Accountability during expanded authority implementation.
- ...
- Examples:
- Organizational Expanded Authoritys, such as:
- Corporate Expanded Authoritys, such as:
- Governmental Expanded Authoritys, such as:
- Legal Expanded Authoritys, such as:
- Judicial Expanded Authoritys, such as:
- Law Enforcement Expanded Authoritys, such as:
- ...
- Organizational Expanded Authoritys, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- Limited Authority, which restricts rather than expands power scope.
- Delegated Authority, which transfers existing authority without necessarily expanding it.
- Temporary Permission, which grants short-term action allowance without changing authority structure.
- Authority Override, which bypasses rather than expands existing authority channels.
- See: Authority, Power Delegation, Jurisdiction, Scope Expansion, Authority Boundary.