The Crossing conceptual framework formalizes analytical structures used to evaluate sovereign mobility, jurisdictional volatility and cross-border life architecture.
It integrates two primary systems:
SRIM — Sovereign Relocation Intelligence Modeling
SVI — Sovereign Volatility Index
A conceptual approach treating relocation as a strategic jurisdictional positioning decision rather than a simple migration event.
Sovereign mobility involves the management of legal status, tax exposure and geopolitical risk through jurisdictional choice.
An analytical modeling framework designed to evaluate relocation decisions through multi-layer jurisdictional analysis.
SRIM integrates legal pathways, economic sustainability, geopolitical exposure and long-term mobility optionality.
The structured distribution of life functions across multiple jurisdictions.
Examples include separation of residence, taxation, asset holding and citizenship.
The degree to which an individual maintains the ability to legally reposition between jurisdictions.
Strategic preparation of alternative relocation pathways in response to jurisdictional instability.
A structured analytical index measuring jurisdictional instability across regulatory, migration, fiscal and geopolitical domains.
The speed and intensity of legislative change affecting residents and capital.
The long-term predictability of residency, visa and citizenship regimes.
The degree of financial disclosure and reporting obligations imposed on individuals operating across borders.
The frequency and structural depth of taxation reforms affecting international income and residency.
The probability of geopolitical disruption affecting mobility, capital flows or legal stability.
The systemic instability of a jurisdiction arising from regulatory, political or economic change.
The vulnerability created when an individual is structurally dependent on a single jurisdiction.
The Crossing conceptual framework does not provide legal advice or immigration services.
Its purpose is analytical: to structure complex cross-border decisions through modeling, comparison and risk mapping.