Policymakers

Shape AI policy with the researchers who understand the real risks.

Effective AI policy cannot be written from a distance. Access the Top 10 threats research, the Summit policy track, and the experts defining global AI governance. Workshop proposals with technical researchers before they reach a parliamentary chamber.

What you get

The policy track is built for people who need to get it right.

Policymakers face a different problem than regulators or academics. You need to produce something that works under pressure, passes legal scrutiny, and is technically grounded. Here is how Better Societies helps.

Top 10 threats research

The MIT Domain Taxonomy-grounded Top 10 AI threats report. Peer-reviewed, publicly citeable, and built by researchers with no product to sell. Use it in briefings, parliamentary submissions, and public consultations.

Summit policy track

Dedicated policy sessions at the AI Safety Summit where policymakers workshop proposals with technical experts in real time. Not a panel, not a keynote: structured working sessions.

Expert consultation access

Direct access to AI safety researchers from Yale, IEEE, Bristol Robotics Lab, UNSW, and Sorbonne. Ask the technical questions your legal team cannot answer and get usable, plainly stated responses.

Global governance community

Join the Better Societies community to connect with policymakers, researchers, and civil society organisations working on AI governance across jurisdictions. The EU AI Act is one framework. You will need to understand others.

Regulatory deadlines decoded

The EU AI Act transparency obligations and prohibitions bind from 2 August 2026. High-risk Annex III systems were deferred to 2 December 2027 under the Digital Omnibus proposal. Better Societies tracks every moving date and what it means in practice.

Accelerator insight

Get early visibility into the startups building AI safety infrastructure before they reach procurement. Know what is technically available before you mandate it in policy.

The expert network

The people who advise governments on AI risk.

Better Societies works with researchers who contribute to IEEE ethics frameworks, advise national AI strategies, and publish the literature regulators cite. These are the people you need before a policy goes to committee.

Wendell Wallach

Yale Center for Bioethics

John C. Havens

IEEE Global Initiative

Toby Walsh

UNSW Sydney

Alan Winfield

Bristol Robotics Lab / IEEE

Raja Chatila

Sorbonne / IEEE

Kathleen Richardson

De Montfort University

Next step

Join the policy track.

Email us to reserve your spot in the Summit policy track and get access to the Top 10 threats research. Or join the broader community to start building the connections now.