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Abstract

Contemporary multi-agent workspace managers rely heavily on centralized orchestration, graph-based execution models, and static role assignment. While effective for bounded workflows, these paradigms exhibit structural limitations when extended to long-horizon, adaptive, and adversarial environments. This paper introduces Crusade Doctrine–Inspired Multi-Agent Workspace Governance (CD-MAWG), a novel architectural framework that reconceptualizes multi-agent coordination through the lens of crusade-era military organization, logistics, and distributed authority.

Rather than treating computation as a sequence of tasks, CD-MAWG models it as a persistent campaign sustained by evolving agent societies. Core innovations include relic-based authority propagation, campaign-state memory structures, emergent agent castes, and dual-constraint scheduling grounded in both resource logistics and coherence alignment. This approach enables decentralized, resilient, and self-evolving multi-agent systems capable of operating continuously over extended temporal horizons.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

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