Definition
The sequenced touchpoints where a person learns what a system will do, grants or denies permission, and can revise that choice over time.
Strong consent journeys use anticipatory consent, visible permission surfaces, and healthy refusal budgets so pausing or exiting does not jeopardize access or care.
Scope
I. Friction & flow. Designing intentional friction that protects people while keeping harm contained.
Operational tests
- Evidence appears in documentation, interface cues, or governance artifacts that reflect consent journey.
- Teams can point to a concrete example that demonstrates consent journey in practice.
Genealogy
Ethotechnics uses Consent Journey to extend the i. friction & flow vocabulary and connect governance, design, and policy teams.