The Structured Accountability Library Behind DAREB

DAREB is supported by a structured accountability library containing hundreds of linked evidential conditions relating to decisions, authority, records, evidence and basis.

The library expands the public DAREB framework into a machine-readable examination structure focused on one question: can a single challenged decision actually be shown from records and evidence that already exist?

From the Public DAREB Test to the Structured Library.

The public DAREB Test sets out five things that must be capable of being shown when a single automated or AI-assisted decision is challenged: the Decision, the Authority, the Record, the Evidence and the Basis.

Behind that published test sits a structured accountability library organised around those same five elements.

The library contains hundreds of linked evidential conditions, challenge questions, examination paths, exposure narratives, and accountability relationships designed to examine whether one specific outcome can be reconstructed clearly from records and evidence that already exist.

The structure is organised around challenged decisions rather than systems in general. It does not ask whether governance exists in broad terms. It examines whether a specific decision affecting a specific person at a specific moment can actually be demonstrated under scrutiny.

Each element examines what can be shown directly from records, what remains uncertain and where evidential gaps begin to appear when decisions are examined after the event.

The structure is machine-readable and designed to support consistent examination across large numbers of accountability conditions while preserving the same underlying evidential logic throughout.

DAREB is not compliance software, governance automation or operational decision tooling. It is a structured accountability reference and examination system focused on post-decision reconstruction, demonstrability and evidential accountability.