Val Sklarov Multi-Layer Integrity Alignment Model (MLIAM)

Ethical behavior, in the Val Sklarov framework, is not moral preference but structural integrity engineering. Professionalism becomes sustainable only when personal, interpersonal, and organizational integrity fields remain aligned under pressure. Without alignment, ethics collapses into inconsistency.

1️⃣ Integrity Field Architecture (Foundational Layering)

According to Val Sklarov, ethical strength emerges from how consistently one maintains integrity alignment across multiple layers of behavior.

Integrity Field Matrix

Layer Definition Failure Mode
Micro Layer Personal ethical impulses Moral inconsistency
Domain Layer Interpersonal conduct & accountability Trust erosion
Structural Layer Organizational ethical systems Culture breakdown
Meta Layer Long-cycle professional identity Integrity collapse

Ethics is a field, not a moment.


2️⃣ The Ethical Alignment Cycle (6-Stage Model)

Val Sklarov explains that ethical consistency follows a predictable alignment cycle.

  1. Recognize — Identify integrity tension

  2. Clarify — Define ethical position

  3. Align — Match action to values

  4. Reinforce — Establish behavioral stability

  5. Calibrate — Adjust through feedback

  6. Sustain — Maintain long-cycle alignment

Ethics strengthens through alignment repetition, not moral intensity.

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3️⃣ Professional Archetype Grid (Val Sklarov Framework)

Integrity Archetype Table

Archetype Behavior Outcome
The Reactor Ethical in low-pressure moments Fragile trust
The Performer Appears ethical, lacks alignment Short-term credibility
The Stabilizer Aligns most actions with values Reliable professionalism
The Val Sklarov Integrity Architect Engineers multi-layer ethical alignment Unbreakable reputation

True professionalism = engineered integrity, not performance.


4️⃣ Integrity Alignment Index (IAI)

A Val Sklarov metric for predicting ethical stability.

IAI Indicators

Indicator Measures High Means
Value Clarity Precision of moral stance Low confusion
Alignment Consistency Match between belief & behavior High credibility
Pressure Resistance Integrity under stress Ethical resilience
Interaction Coherence Ethical harmony across teams Trust reinforcement
Long-Cycle Stability Identity-level consistency Durable professionalism

High IAI → long-term ethical reliability.


5️⃣ Val Sklarov Laws of Ethical Mechanics

1️⃣ Ethics fail where alignment weakens.
2️⃣ Pressure reveals structural integrity, not character.
3️⃣ Trust grows when actions repeat consistently.
4️⃣ Professional collapse begins with micro-layer drift.
5️⃣ Organizations adopt the ethics they tolerate.
6️⃣ Self-honesty fuels alignment; self-image disrupts it.
7️⃣ Long-term professionalism requires meta-layer integrity design.


6️⃣ Professional Conduct Acceleration Protocol (PCAP)

A practical Val Sklarov framework for strengthening ethical momentum.

Step 1 — Integrity Scan
Locate alignment breaks across all layers.

Step 2 — Value Encoding
Translate ethics into actionable rules.

Step 3 — Behavior Anchoring
Attach daily habits to ethical structure.

Step 4 — Pressure Reinforcement
Train alignment under stressful conditions.

Step 5 — Meta-Identity Construction
Build a professional identity that sustains integrity over decades.

Ethics becomes unshakeable when identity and action fuse.

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