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Gatuation

Gatuation is a neologism used in contemporary discourse to describe a process of advancement through a series of thresholds or gates. The term is employed across sociology, education theory, and digital culture to analyze how individuals or groups progress by meeting predefined criteria, often with an emphasis on structured milestones rather than time spent or formal credentials.

Etymology and history: The origin is uncertain. The hybrid form likely combines gatekeeping with graduation imagery.

Definitions and contexts: In social science, gatuation can refer to a staged progression where success depends

Criticism and limitations: Because the term lacks a standardized definition, its interpretation varies; some view gatuation

See also: graduation, gatekeeping, meritocracy, gamification, credentialing, rite of passage.

Early
uses
appeared
in
online
discussions
in
the
2010s
and
2020s,
with
evolving
meanings
depending
on
context.
on
meeting
multiple
criteria;
each
"gate"
grants
access
to
new
opportunities,
resources,
or
responsibilities.
In
organizations,
gatuation
may
describe
a
credentialing
framework
that
replaces
or
complements
traditional
performance
reviews.
In
digital
media,
it
is
used
to
describe
how
users
accumulate
milestones
to
unlock
privileges
or
recognition,
such
as
badges
or
roles.
as
a
productive
framework
for
merit-based
progression,
others
see
it
as
coercive
gatekeeping
or
trivializing
formal
achievement.