Mandate-Execute-Verify (MEV) Lifecycle
Definition
The Mandate-Execute-Verify (MEV) lifecycle is a procedural framework for regulatory compliance where autonomous agents act on corporate mandates by querying internal and external data to verify outcomes. It operationalizes compliance as a dynamic, continuous loop rather than a static audit process.
Key Characteristics
- Mandate-Driven: Compliance begins with the translation of high-level corporate directives into machine-readable formats.
- Automated Execution: Leverages autonomous agents to query data across internal and external systems using secure connectivity.
- Continuous Verification: Establishes a real-time feedback loop comparing actual operational data against standardized environmental and financial thresholds.
- Dynamic Compliance: Shifts compliance from periodic static auditing to an ongoing, automated process.
Applications
- Automated Regulatory Compliance: Scaling complex controls like EU SSbD requirements or CBAM carbon intensity limits.
- Industrial Data Spaces: Managing compliance workflows within distributed supply chain ecosystems.
- Supply Chain Governance: Translating macro-regulatory requirements into actionable OPA schemas for procurement and finance proxies.
Mentions in Source
- “Processes can follow a Mandate-Execute-Verify loop.” — sources/_id-372_current_version|_id-372_current_version
- “The Fab Procurement & Finance Accountant Proxy… This thread initiates the MEV lifecycle by translating macro corporate mandates, such as EU SSbD Per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) controls or CBAM carbon intensity limits into machine-readable OPA schemas.” — sources/_id-372_current_version|_id-372_current_version