Governance

Governance design for consequential AI systems.

Governance here means operational accountability: decision rights, evidence chains, escalation logic, and documentation that survives real review. The work draws on clinical trial coordination, AI quality evaluation, and archival discipline.

This page foregrounds verifiable governance records rather than service slogans. Start here if you need to see how claims, controls, and consequences are actually structured.

Visible practice 3 Governance records

Project entries showing governance as control design and institutional workflow.

Public argument 2 Related essays

Selected writing that clarifies the conceptual stakes behind implementation choices.

Working mode EN/FR Languages

Work delivered in English and French across governance documentation and strategic writing.

Practice areas

What this governance work produces.

The emphasis is inspectability under pressure: clear authority maps, reviewable evidence, and controls that can be operated by real teams.

Practice area

Governance architecture and decision rights

Map who decides what, on what grounds, and under which escalation rules so authority remains explicit rather than assumed.

Practice area

Evidence design and traceability

Structure records, approvals, and source chains so consequential claims can be inspected, challenged, and defended.

Practice area

Policy translation into operations

Turn standards and principles into concrete procedures teams can execute under deadline without losing accountability.

Practice area

Strategic interpretation and public clarity

Produce briefs, essays, and explanatory texts that connect governance choices to institutional legitimacy and social consequence.

Selected work

Projects that make governance legible.

These records show governance as implemented structure: procedures, review surfaces, and evidence architecture that can be inspected.

Contact

Reach out with context and stakes.

Email is the clearest channel. A concise first message with your context, objective, and timeline usually produces the fastest useful reply.

Best fits

  • Institutional analysis, legitimacy mapping, and consequence tracing
  • Governance architecture, decision traceability, and review protocols
  • Public writing, editorial commissions, and media requests
  • Autodidact app and workflow tool development for governance contexts
  • Talks, guest lectures, and panel programming
  • Research collaborations and publication discussions

Direct