Why do well-intentioned interventions fail?
Why do systems designed to help so often create resistance, burnout, or breakdown?
Why does behavior change temporarily-then revert, collapse, or escalate?
In Meaning Alignment, Katrina M. Stradford introduces a unifying framework that explains what decades of behavior-based models have missed: behavior does not begin with motivation-it begins with meaning.
Drawing from developmental psychology, systems theory, behavioral health, and real-world institutional experience, this book reframes human behavior as a navigational response to perceived coherence, safety, and dignity. When meaning aligns, behavior stabilizes. When it fractures, behavior adapts-often in ways mistakenly labeled as dysfunction, defiance, or disengagement.
The Meaning Alignment Framework offers a practical, evidence-ready model for understanding how individuals, organizations, and policies succeed-or fail-based on how well they preserve internal coherence across body, mind, and identity. Stradford shows how misalignment silently drives burnout, compliance theater, chronic conflict, and systemic harm, while alignment restores agency, trust, and sustainable performance.
This book moves beyond theory. It provides:
A formalized framework for diagnosing misalignment
Visual operational models for individuals, organizations, and policy systems
Lifespan-based activation cycles explaining predictable breakdown points
Tools for designing interventions that hold under pressure
Measurement strategies for research, evaluation, and large-scale implementation
Written for practitioners, leaders, educators, policymakers, and researchers, Meaning Alignment offers a new human systems science-one that replaces control with coherence, punishment with understanding, and short-term compliance with long-term stability.
This is not a book about fixing people.
It is a book about designing systems humans can survive-and sustain.
Related Subjects
Psychology