50-Year System Perspective
Khalil Osiris brings 50 years of system perspective to economic architecture design.
At 16, he entered the criminal justice system. He turned 17 in jail. The state sentenced him as an adult to prison—20 years across two sentences from 1976 to 1999. He earned both a BA and an MA from Boston University while incarcerated.
Released at 40, he built 27 years of post-release professional work in policy analysis and institutional consulting.
This dual lens—lived experience inside carceral infrastructure and policy architecture expertise outside it—informs every framework he designs.
The 2Gen Economy model, the Durability Index, and the LESI Architecture emerge from structural analysis, not theory.
They measure what compounds.
They build household stability infrastructure that scales.
The 2Gen Economy & Professional Architecture
The 2Gen Economy restructures economic participation around the household as the unit of change.
It rejects individual-only interventions.
It measures stability infrastructure that serves two generations simultaneously—parents and children inside the same household unit.
The Durability Index defines the measurement threshold: 18 to 36 months of household stability.
Not days. Not weeks.
Eighteen months to three years.
This timeframe captures the infrastructure necessary for genuine economic repositioning—employment that persists beyond crisis cycles, housing that stabilizes school enrollment, childcare that enables sustained labor force participation.
Measurement is destiny.
Short-term program metrics obscure long-term household infrastructure needs.
The LESI Architecture (Lived Experience Structural Intelligence) operationalizes this measurement standard.
LESI is architecture, not framework.
It integrates first-person system knowledge into policy design infrastructure, creating decision-making systems that account for downstream household impact before implementation.
The architecture targets policy durability at scale—not pilot programs, not one-time interventions, but structural redesign that changes how institutions measure household stability across 18-36 month horizons.
Credentials & Authority
Education:
BA, Boston University
MA, Boston University
Professional Experience:
27 years of consulting and policy analysis work (1999–2026), focused on economic architecture and institutional accountability systems.
Institutional Affiliations:
- National Association of Reentry Professionals (NARP)
- Bluu Kazi
- EC-Council
- Candid
- Cypherworx
Policy Expertise:
Khalil designs measurement infrastructure for household economic stability. He advises institutions on durability standards for anti-poverty policy, workforce development systems, and justice reinvestment models.
His work centers structural questions:
What compounds over 18-36 months?
Which interventions scale at the household level?
How do institutions measure infrastructure, not inputs?
The credentials verify the authority.
The 50-year system perspective defines the lens.
Verified Profiles & Entity Verification
Khalil Osiris maintains verified profiles across professional, publishing, and institutional platforms for entity verification and cross-platform authority signaling.
- Amazon Author Profile
- Twitter/X
- Council for Inclusive Capitalism
- Athens Democracy Forum
- IMDb
- World Human Forum
These profiles support schema.org sameAs markup for Knowledge Graph consolidation and search entity disambiguation.