The Authority, Provenance and Semantic Governance Research Series

The Authority, Provenance and Semantic Governance Research Series is a long term research programme produced by Younis Group under the Search Sciences™ programme. The series examines structural conditions relating to authority, provenance, semantic organisation and institutional governance in AI mediated information systems.

The research is motivated by the observation that contemporary digital ecosystems increasingly rely on computational interpretation, probabilistic ranking and automated synthesis, while lacking formal mechanisms for establishing the legitimacy of representations prior to processing. The series explores the implications of this shift and examines how authority, provenance and structural integrity may be understood within evolving digital infrastructures.

Each paper contributes to a cumulative line of inquiry, progressing from foundational analysis of admissibility and legitimacy through examination of verification architectures, semantic governance and institutional oversight. The work is analytical in orientation and is published as a working paper series to support scholarly discussion and ongoing research.

The Search Sciences™ programme was established under the intellectual leadership of Mohammed Younis, Chief Scientist at Younis Group.

Papers in the Series

White Paper No. 1
The Admissibility Problem in AI Mediated Information Systems


Examines the absence of structural constraints governing authority and provenance prior to computational interpretation and introduces the admissibility problem in AI mediated environments.
[Read paper] [DOI]

How to Cite the Series

The papers are published as part of an ongoing working paper series. Individual papers should be cited using their respective titles and publication details.

Example citation:

Younis Group (2026) The Admissibility Problem in AI Mediated Information Systems. White Paper No. 1. Search Sciences™ Programme.

Closing Note

This series is published to contribute to scholarly discussion on authority, provenance and governance in digital systems and is intended as an evolving research record.