Purpose
This classification model defines the structural organisation of the motorcycle club cultural record. It provides a consistent framework through which all articles, definitions, and concepts are positioned, enabling systematic analysis, cross-referencing, and citation.
The framework treats motorcycle club culture as an integrated organisational system composed of interrelated domains rather than isolated topics.
1. Governance Structures
Definition:
The systems through which authority is established, distributed, and exercised within motorcycle clubs.
Includes:
- Officer Structure
- Executive Authority
- Bylaws
- Decision-making processes
- Membership authority mechanisms
Function:
Defines how control, accountability, and leadership operate at an organisational level.
2. Role Functions
Definition:
The specific positions within motorcycle club structures and their associated responsibilities.
Includes:
- President
- Vice President
- Sergeant-at-Arms
- Secretary
- Treasurer
- Road Captain
Function:
Explains how governance is operationalised through role-based responsibility and task distribution.
3. Operational Systems
Definition:
The procedural and functional activities through which the club operates on a practical level.
Includes:
- Meetings (“Church”)
- Ride organisation and coordination
- Internal procedures
- Event management
- Communication processes
Function:
Documents how the organisation functions in practice beyond formal structure.
4. Membership Systems
Definition:
The processes and structures governing entry, progression, and status within the club.
Includes:
- Prospecting
- Membership progression
- Patch status
- Member responsibilities
- Membership authority
Function:
Defines how individuals are integrated into and move within the organisational structure.
5. Cultural Frameworks
Definition:
The underlying values, norms, and interpretive systems that shape behaviour and meaning within motorcycle club culture.
Includes:
- Protocol
- Respect
- Hierarchy (as cultural meaning, not just structure)
- Identity
- Symbolism
Function:
Provides context for understanding why organisational structures operate as they do.
6. Organisational Identity & Continuity
Definition:
The mechanisms through which clubs maintain consistency, identity, and continuity over time.
Includes:
- Institutional memory
- Record keeping
- Club identity
- Legacy structures
- Continuity practices
Function:
Explains how motorcycle clubs persist beyond individual members and leadership changes.
Cross-Domain Principles
The following principles apply across all domains:
- Interdependence: No domain operates in isolation
- Consistency: Core structural principles are broadly shared across clubs
- Variation: Implementation varies by club, region, and scale
- Non-reductionism: Cultural meaning cannot be reduced solely to structure
- Bounded analysis: Observations remain within defined scope and evidence limits
Article Classification Structure
Each article within the record is assigned a position using the following format:
Domain: Primary classification area
Subdomain: Specific structural category within the domain
Function: The role the subject plays within the broader system
Example Application
Article: Officer Structure
- Domain: Governance Structures
- Subdomain: Executive Organisation
- Function: Authority Distribution Mechanism
Article: Sergeant-at-Arms
- Domain: Role Functions
- Subdomain: Security & Discipline
- Function: Enforcement and Order Maintenance
Article: Church (Meetings)**
- Domain: Operational Systems
- Subdomain: Governance Procedure
- Function: Collective Decision-Making Process
Relationship to Glossary
The glossary operates as the definitional layer of the framework.
- Provides standardised terminology
- Ensures consistency across domains
- Supports clarity in classification and analysis
All glossary terms correspond to one or more domains within the classification model.
Purpose of the Framework
This classification system enables:
- Systematic organisation of knowledge
- Consistent article positioning
- Cross-referencing between related concepts
- Academic citation at both article and framework level
- Cumulative development of a structured cultural record
The framework ensures that individual articles function not as isolated texts, but as components of a coherent and expandable body of knowledge.
