INSIGHTS AND RESEARCH

Working notes from the frontier of AI governance.

Position papers, regulatory submissions, framework updates, and short reads from inside the Institute. Published when we have something to say.

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FEATURED PUBLICATIONS

What we have published, in print and to standards bodies.

First PreLiminary Report of the UN INDEPENDENT SCIENTIFIC PANEL on AI

The UN Has Given Us the Evidence. Now Someone Has to Do the Governing.

A critical reading of the first Preliminary Report of the UN Independent International Scientific Panel on AI, and what it means for the EW-AiRM™ framework

By Prof. Markus Krebsz | Human-Ai.Institute | July 2026

FEATURED PUBLICATIONS

What we have published, in print and to standards bodies.

FORTHCOMING BOOK

Enterprise-Wide AI Risk Management (EW-AiRM™)

Wiley Finance, 2026. The full framework reference. Three layers, six strategic pillars, the MIT-based operational layer, the eight-category AI Black Swan resilience model, and the HAIPECR ethical overlay.

Read about the book →

UNECE 2024

ECE/TRADE/486: Common Regulatory Arrangement

The UNECE WP.6 voluntary instrument for AI regulation across 56 member states. Marky is the project lead and author. Sits as the regulator-facing complement to EW-AiRM™ at the enterprise level.

UNECE website ↗

OECD LISTING, 2023

HAIPECR on the OECD AI Policy Observatory

The seven-dimension ethical overlay has been listed on the OECD AI Policy Observatory since April 2023. Mapped to the UNESCO 2021 Recommendation on the Ethics of AI.

HAIPECR overview →

UN SUBMISSION, APR 2026

Sovereign AI for the Bottom of the Pyramid

Co-authored paper (Mamun, Faride, Hansel, Krebsz) submitted to the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance. Applies the three-framework stack (UNECE CRA, EW-AiRM™, HAIPECR) to sovereign AI in lower-income contexts.

Request a copy →

WORKING NOTES

Short pieces and framework commentary.

A rolling set of working notes on AI governance, regulatory developments, and the design choices behind EW-AiRM™.

FRAMEWORK NOTE

Why HAIPECR uses a lowercase "i"

A short note on why typography carries weight in framework design. The "i" stands for inclusivity, deliberately lowercase to signal an embedded prerequisite rather than a standalone pillar.

Coming soon

REGULATORY COMPARISON

EW-AiRM™ and the EU AI Act: complement, not duplicate

The EU AI Act tells you what is prohibited and high-risk. EW-AiRM™ tells you how to run governance over what you keep. This note walks through the practical interlock between the two.

Coming soon · See FAQ for the short version

RESILIENCE

The eighth AI Black Swan: quantum cryptographic transition

The framework’s resilience layer was expanded from seven to eight Black Swan categories to cover the NIST FIPS 203/204/205 transition. Why post-quantum is now an AI risk problem.

Coming soon

GOVERNANCE MAXIM

"Waiting for perfect clarity is not a governance position."

From Chapter 2 of the book. A short essay on why AI governance has to be deployable under uncertainty, and what changes when you accept the regulatory picture will keep moving for the next decade.

Coming soon

STANDARDS

MIT FutureTech and the discipline of a public risk repository

The operational layer of EW-AiRM™ is built on the MIT AI Risk Repository (CC BY 4.0). Why that choice matters, what it costs, and what it gives back.

Coming soon

PRACTITIONER NOTE

Single-locus accountability is a structural gap, not a feature

An assessment of EW-AiRM™ against the Accountability Horizon paper. Identifies one place where the framework leans on an assumption that does not survive multi-agent deployments. Includes a proposed correction.

Coming soon

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The framework overview is the best one-page entry point. The book, when it lands, is the long-form version.

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