Where do I find a definition of what the principal race officer is responsible for? Do they always have to sit on the commttee boat, pull flags and push the horn button? Or could they as well be anywhere on the race course as long as they have an overview? Do they have to decide on all matters personally or can they delegate things like the start procedures etc?
You find the Role definition in 2 World Sailing documents:
@Thomas: In your question you are not talking about a principal race officer (PRO) but a Course Race Officer or simply a Race Officer who is responsible for his/her race course. However, I see the role of a (Course) Race Officer in a more differentiated way than just 'pulling the flaggs or push the horn button'. The Race Officer is responsible for everything on the race course regarding race management.
A Race Officer / Course Race Officer functions like a Chief Operating Officer for a single course - they may take on a specific high-level task (course geometry, communications), but often these tasks are delegated to others. Confusingly, in the US, these are called "PROs."
I think you hit the nail on the head. There may be guidance as to who does what, but there are no Rules. The only Rule of which I'm aware is 90 (at the direction of the OA), and it only speaks to the Race Committee. Most OAs will appoint a RC Chair, and allow for great latitude as to their choice of the remaining members of the committee - often within somewhat limiting parameters (e.g. don't have 20 helpers for a 10 boat ILCA regatta). The chair, as with pretty much any committee, accepts responsibility for any and all actions of the entire committee. If the Chair is more comfortable following the fleet around, or finds the personnel not appropriate for a specific position, any good manager should be able to fill the role (flag waver, mark setter, etc.). I prefer to take the blame for mistakes (and there are ALLLLLways mistakes) and credit the entire team for the successes, but that's just me. At the end of the day, we do what the guys putting the event together tell us to do.
That said, people who you might rely upon may be accustomed to fitting into the established roles and structures as outlined in the comments and documents our members have provided here. This is just to say that by leveraging what is established, developed and documented, you might avoid some confusion.