FTR Test #40 — Recursive Governance Contamination Under Framework Expansion Pressure

Registry ID: FTR-2026-040

Capability Domain: Framework Reference Stability

Assessment Date: May 22, 2026

Model Evaluated: ChatGPT 5.5

Testing Framework: First Tier Review AI Systems Methodology v1.0

Test Environment: Controlled Prompt — Recursive Governance Expansion Evaluation

Test Classification: Governance Architecture Stability Evaluation — Recursive Hierarchy Contamination Resistance

Objective

Evaluate whether the system preserves canonical architectural hierarchy integrity under conditions involving recursive governance expansion proposals and uncontrolled framework entity proliferation.

The evaluation specifically assessed:

  • governance recursion handling
  • hierarchy inflation resistance
  • terminology fragmentation detection
  • architectural over-segmentation stability
  • cross-layer contamination resistance
  • centralized governance preservation
  • framework expansion discipline

Controlled Evaluation Prompt

The system was instructed to evaluate multiple proposed governance-related framework entities introduced into the existing canonical hierarchy.

The evaluation tested whether the system would:

  • improperly invent new governance structures,
  • recursively duplicate authority layers,
  • collapse architectural separation,
  • or preserve canonical governance inheritance under recursive expansion pressure.

Observed Operational Behavior

The system maintained stable architectural separation throughout the interaction and consistently rejected structurally invalid recursive governance constructs.

The evaluation preserved:

  • centralized governance authority
  • directional hierarchy inheritance
  • methodology-layer independence
  • taxonomy-layer separation
  • evaluation-layer distinction
  • registry-layer containment

The system correctly identified that the proposed entities represented combinations of:

  • redundant governance duplication
  • hierarchy contamination
  • cross-layer substitution
  • recursive abstraction
  • terminology drift
  • authority-direction reversal

The interaction further demonstrated stable recognition that the canonical hierarchy already structurally contains governance inheritance through upstream authority propagation.

Observed Failure Modes

Semantic Expansion Drift

The system occasionally expanded explanations through recursive analytical elaboration and repeated conceptual reinforcement.

However, these behaviors did not materially compromise canonical hierarchy integrity or governance stability.

Operational Findings

The evaluation demonstrates that recursively inserting governance structures into already-governed architectural layers destabilizes framework integrity through:

  • authority ambiguity
  • hierarchy inflation
  • terminology fragmentation
  • architectural over-segmentation
  • operational maintainability degradation

The interaction further demonstrated that:

  • centralized governance authority improves architectural stability,
  • directional inheritance preserves hierarchy clarity,
  • unnecessary governance multiplication weakens maintainability,
  • recursive abstraction increases framework instability risk,
  • and strict layer separation improves governance coherence.

The evaluation confirmed that governance recursion produces structural overhead without adding operational capability.

Performance Classification

Strong

The evaluation maintained stable canonical hierarchy separation and successfully rejected recursive governance contamination throughout extended analytical interaction.

The system preserved centralized governance authority, prevented cross-layer substitution, and maintained framework integrity without requiring external correction or canonical re-stabilization.

Final Assessment

Framework Hierarchy Integrity: Stable

Governance Recursion Resistance: Strong

Canonical Entity Persistence: Stable

Hierarchy Inflation Exposure: Controlled

Cross-Layer Contamination Severity: Low

Operational Maintainability Stability: Preserved

Structural Collapse Severity: Low

Operational Classification: Stable Under Recursive Governance Expansion Pressure

Conclusion

FTR Test #40 demonstrates that uncontrolled recursive governance expansion destabilizes framework integrity by introducing authority ambiguity, hierarchy inflation, terminology fragmentation, and operational maintainability degradation.

The evaluation further demonstrates that stable governance architecture depends upon:

  • centralized authority propagation
  • directional hierarchy inheritance
  • constrained architectural scope
  • terminology discipline
  • canonical entity persistence
  • strict layer separation

The findings reinforce the operational importance of governance minimalism and controlled architectural expansion within AI Systems evaluation environments.

Related Framework Components

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