The Private Order
Access-controlled networks within open societies
The Case
Definition
A parallel access-controlled network operating within an ostensibly open-access democratic society, where membership is maintained through reciprocal obligation and access to the network IS the rent.
North, Wallis & Weingast, *Violence and Social Orders* (2009). The distinction between "limited access orders" (where elites control access to valuable resources and organizations) and "open access orders" (where competition is impersonal and access is broadly available). The insight applied here: open-access societies contain embedded limited-access networks among elites.
Mechanism
Access requires introduction by existing members. You cannot buy your way in; you must be invited.
Membership creates implicit debts. Attending dinners, accepting introductions, participating in philanthropic initiatives generates social obligations that can be called upon later.
The network members occupy positions across multiple institutions (finance, government, media, law, academia), creating a cross-institutional coordination layer that operates informally.
Movement between government and private sector (K&E↔DOJ, Goldman↔Treasury) isn't merely career progression; it's how the private order maintains influence across institutions.
Members who defect (cooperate with investigations, break ranks publicly) are excluded. The cost of exclusion is loss of deal flow, social access, and career opportunities.
Canonical Instances
Filip (DAG→K&E partner), Benczkowski (K&E→DOJ Criminal Division head), multiple other attorneys cycling between prosecution and defense. The DPA framework that Filip wrote as DAG became the tool K&E used for corporate clients. The "order" spans both institutions.
Wexner-Lauder-Steinhardt-Bronfman philanthropic/intelligence network. Self-consciously organized as an exclusive club of billionaire donors with shared political objectives. Entry by invitation only. Coordinated action on Israel policy, political donations, and intelligence-adjacent activities.
Epstein's science funding, dinners with academics, participation in Edge Foundation events — these aren't charity. They're membership dues in a network that provides access to credentialed expertise, social legitimacy, and young talent.