Ranks and Hierarchy
The Institute of Social Oversight (ISO) has a simple hierarchy based on your jurisdiction of oversight as a Liaison Officer. The nature of each role and their purpose is elaborated below:
Adjunct
If you have been certified by the ISO for passing its educational program, you are automatically an Adjunct. Adjunctsare either those awaiting to be hired as a Liaison Officer or simply seek not to be a Liaison Officer and merely support the Institute's mission without seeing it as a career path. Adjuncts, in practice, do in fact liaise in one way, with their workplace and social spaces. They are encouraged to promote the ISO's mission as volunteers on their own time.
Magister
Alumni who have a job as a Liaison Officer become Magisters, named after the historic academic role of a teacher of the arts. Based on its historic roots, Magisters as Liaison Officers promote, educate, and represent the mission of the ISO in any institution or community thay are professionally liaising with.
Dean
ISO Liaison Officers who oversee a sizable territory with other Magister level Liaison Officers become Deans. They ensure Magisters and Alumni in their region do their duties in promoting the ISO's mission and behave in a way that does not harm the Institute's interest. There are two types of Deans, those that have the power to vote are a minority that make up the legal Board of Directors and those without voting power exist to be merely territorial administrators and other internal staff.
Provost
The Head of the Institute of Social Oversight (ISO) and the legal President, Chairman of the Board, and likely the Executive Director is the Provost. The Provost represents the ISO to major institutions and guides it and its many Almuni towards the building of Greater Societal Order. The Provost rules for life until death or resignation, new Provots are elected by voting Deans.