Thanks for sharing! I’m curious if any of these readings were most helpful around forming “theories of change toward achieving a limited form of global governance in specific key domains where it might be most important” or “viable mechanisms for partial global governance in those domains.”
As someone exploring alternative ways to govern near-global powerful technology organizations that interact closely with nation-states and fund a significant proportion of AI research, this is what I would be most curious about (and which also seems e.g. particularly relevant re. x-risks). In the linked doc, I focus on sortition-based systems as one potential approach, but there are additional routes (e.g. ML-augmented) that I am also exploring using ~this framework, and I’d be interested any I have not considered.
Thanks for sharing! I’m curious if any of these readings were most helpful around forming “theories of change toward achieving a limited form of global governance in specific key domains where it might be most important” or “viable mechanisms for partial global governance in those domains.”
As someone exploring alternative ways to govern near-global powerful technology organizations that interact closely with nation-states and fund a significant proportion of AI research, this is what I would be most curious about (and which also seems e.g. particularly relevant re. x-risks). In the linked doc, I focus on sortition-based systems as one potential approach, but there are additional routes (e.g. ML-augmented) that I am also exploring using ~this framework, and I’d be interested any I have not considered.