CONCEPT
The Law of the Situation
Follett's 1925 principle that <em>authority should derive from the requirements of the work</em> rather than from hierarchical position — orders depersonalized into situational necessities both parties are studying together.
Mary Parker Follett's most practically consequential organizational principle: that orders in a well-functioning organization derive their legitimacy from the situation being addressed rather than from the personal authority of the person issuing them. 'Depersonalize the order,' she wrote, 'unite all concerned in a study of the situation, discover the law of the situation, and obey that.' The manager does not command the worker; both study the work together and discover what it requires. Authority flows from the work, not the chart. In AI-augmented organizations, the principle determines whether tools concentrate decisional authority in the senior decision-maker or distribute it across everyone with relevant situated knowledge — the foundation of organizational epistemology in the AI age.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The law of the situation emerged from Follett's 1925 paper 'The Giving of Orders' and remains one of the most penetrating analyses of organizational authority ever written. Personal authority derives its force from hierarchical position: the order is legitimate because the person issuing