# Governance and Care > What if care was the logic, not the afterthought? Looking towards relational systems. **Published by:** [On The Hierarchy Of Clouds](https://paragraph.com/@othoc/) **Published on:** 2025-03-18 **URL:** https://paragraph.com/@othoc/governance-and-care ## Content A woman applies for government assistance. The process is a maze. Endless paperwork, rigid eligibility rules, an algorithm that flags her case for review but never explains why. She calls the helpline. A robotic voice tells her to check the website. Frustrated, she walks into a community centre. A volunteer listens to her, helps her navigate the forms, calls a caseworker. Within a week, she gets the support she needs. Two systems of governance: one built on efficiency and control, the other on care and relationship. One makes her feel like a burden. The other makes her feel human. And it is not just governments. Organisations, platforms, even workplaces make these same trade-offs, often without noticing.A Core ProvocationWhat if governance was not designed around efficiency, control, and risk management—but instead around care, reciprocity, and relationship?A Reflection on Trade-offs and TensionsGovernance always prioritises something over something else: • Control over trust • Efficiency over relationship • Certainty over possibility Most governance structures avoid care because care is unpredictable. It requires human judgment, trust, and response. Things that cannot be automated or controlled. So governance makes a trade-off. Prevent fraud at all costs, even if it means preventing access to those who need help.Who benefits from this choice?• Governments reduce liability • Institutions avoid complexity • Systems maintain order, but often at the cost of the people they are supposed to serveWhere This Breaks Down and What Else Could ExistWhen governance prioritises efficiency over care, we see: • Automated systems that deny benefits without explanation • Hospitals that feel like factories. Patients waiting hours for ten-minute appointments because the system is designed for throughput, not care • Cities that manage people as data points rather than as neighboursBut governance could be designed differently: • From transaction to relationship → Systems built around trust, discretion, and human connection • From risk avoidance to well-being → Governance that prioritises flourishing over mere compliance • From neutrality to accountability → Care as a systemic responsibility, not just an individual choice Care is not a soft principle. It is a governance logic. Without it, systems become violent in their indifference. Because when care is missing, governance becomes harm by design. And care doesn’t just live in one service or system. It shows up when systems work together. When housing, health, education, and community services stop operating in silos and start collaborating. Care becomes collective. Governance shifts from single-point transactions to shared responsibility. Impact grows when systems are designed to listen, adapt, and act together. Not just efficiently, but relationally.Provocative Questions to Take Away• How does your governance system enable or block care? • Where has efficiency replaced relationship in decision-making? • What would governance rooted in care actually look like in your context? Thanks for reading! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. ## Publication Information - [On The Hierarchy Of Clouds](https://paragraph.com/@othoc/): Publication homepage - [All Posts](https://paragraph.com/@othoc/): More posts from this publication - [RSS Feed](https://api.paragraph.com/blogs/rss/@othoc): Subscribe to updates - [Farcaster](https://farcaster.xyz/!1058959): Follow on Farcaster ## Optional - [Collect as NFT](https://paragraph.com/@othoc/governance-and-care): Support the author by collecting this post - [View Collectors](https://paragraph.com/@othoc/governance-and-care/collectors): See who has collected this post