interauthority
Interauthority is the set of arrangements and processes that enable two or more authorities to coordinate actions, share information, and allocate or delegate responsibility for a common task. Authorities may include government agencies, regulatory bodies, local, regional, or federal entities, or other institutions that hold legal powers within a system of governance. Interauthority encompasses both formal, legally binding mechanisms and informal, practice-based collaborations.
Mechanisms include joint committees or task forces, memoranda of understanding, data-sharing agreements, cross-appointment of staff, joint
Key features are clearly defined roles and authorities, agreed decision-making processes, accountability frameworks, timelines, and dispute-resolution
Benefits include more coherent policy implementation, faster crisis response, cost savings, and greater resilience. Challenges include
Some scholars distinguish interauthority from interagency collaboration by emphasizing the formal allocation and sharing of authority
See also: interagency coordination, cross-border governance, memoranda of understanding.