What if the problem with government wasn’t too many rules, but how they’re organized?
Boston’s permitting overhaul with AI for Impact shows how AI and collective intelligence can simplify the user experience without eroding the safeguards that matter.
Published on Feb 4, 2026 by Beth Simone Noveck
Research Radar
Research Radar: “Unboxing the Prompt”: How Community Feedback (and AI) Helped Us Build Better AI Together
Families are expected to advocate for their children using IEP documents that are dense, technical, and often inaccessible. Instead of treating AI as a black box that produces generic summaries, this project takes a different approach of "unboxing the prompt" and inviting parents into the system's core logic. This post traces how community feedback reshaped the tool at every stage, from moving beyond one-size-fits-all summaries to extracting legally meaningful details, to designing for privacy, to preserving meaning across languages, and to foregrounding student strengths.
Published on Feb 3, 2026 by Dhruv Kamlesh Kumar
AI for Governance
Experimentation as Public Infrastructure
Governments are adopting powerful new technologies faster than their systems are built to learn. This piece by Cassandra Madison at the Center for Civic Futures argues that responsible innovation requires more than access to tools. It requires safe, structured spaces for experimentation. By treating experimentation as public infrastructure, governments can learn early, surface risks before they scale, and make better decisions when the stakes are highest.
Published on Feb 2, 2026 by Cassandra Madison
Global AI Watch
Global AI Watch: Mapping the School, Seeing the System: How Spatial Context Reshaped Public Decision-Making in Uzbekistan and Bhutan
Crowdsourced mapping of schools in Uzbekistan and Bhutan combined with AI data analysis created greater insight into on-the-ground conditions. By treating geography as essential, spatial data, participatory collection, and AI analysis reshaped how evidence-informed public investment and policy decisions are made in Uzbekistan and Bhutan.
Published on Jan 28, 2026 by Aziza Umarova
AI and Problem Solving
Reimagining Public Institutions: Rethinking Leadership for Organizational Transformation
Organizations are among humanity’s most powerful inventions, but many of the structures we take for granted no longer serve the people inside them or the public they exist to support. Drawing on insights from Christian Bason, this piece by Anita McGahan explores how AI can help public organizations move beyond rigid hierarchies toward more humane, trust-based, and purpose-driven ways of working. The result is a vision of government that listens more effectively, empowers frontline staff, and delivers real value to people and communities.
Published on Jan 27, 2026 by Anita McGahan
AI and Service Delivery
Prediction Isn’t Intelligence: How Predictive Models Really Work in Government
A hiring tool changes your "personality" score based on whether there's a bookshelf behind you in an interview. A hospital model suggests asthmatics are safer—because it learned how to respond to the triage system, not the disease. This InnovateUS workshop explains why predictive AI needs governance, not just accuracy.
Published on Jan 27, 2026 by Stephan Schmidt
AI and Labor
Launching the Observatory of Public Sector AI: An Invitation to Build the Evidence Base Together
The Observatory of Public Sector AI is a new research initiative of InnovateUS and The GovLab. The Observatory draws on anonymized data from more than 150,000 public servants nationwide. By analyzing how public employees learn, use, and adapt AI at work, the Observatory aims to identify which investments in skills and training strengthen government capacity, improve services, and deliver better outcomes for residents.
Published on Jan 26, 2026 by Beth Simone Noveck, Anirudh Dinesh, Gregory Porumbescu, Allison Wan and Amanda Welsh
Global AI Watch
Voices in Every Language: How India is Building More Inclusive AI
India's Bhashini platform is democratizing access to digital services for 1.4 billion people by treating multilingual capability as public infrastructure. Through crowdsourced voice donations and open APIs, this initiative could transform how underserved populations access rights and resources that were previously locked behind language barriers.
Published on Jan 21, 2026 by Anirudh Dinesh
AI and the Future of State Regulation
This piece examines how the Commonwealth of Virginia is using artificial intelligence to modernize regulatory review, shifting the focus from regulating AI to governing with it. Drawing on recent reforms led by the Virginia Office of Regulatory Management under Governor Glenn Youngkin, the article outlines how AI tools are being applied to analyze regulations, reduce administrative burden, and improve transparency. The "Virginia Model" offers a practical model for other states exploring how AI can strengthen core government functions.
Published on Jan 20, 2026 by Reeve T. Bull
You’ve Got Less than 30 Seconds”: How Public Servants Can Find the Words to Win Back Trust
In this InnovateUS Amplify workshop, former Member of Congress Brian Baird and former New York Times executive editor Jill Abramson share hard-earned lessons on trust, empathy, and why listening may be the most powerful skill public servants have. Drawing on hundreds of town halls and decades of newsroom leadership, they offer practical guidance for winning back public trust.
Published on Jan 18, 2026 by Amedeo Bettauer
Global AI Watch
Global Watch: Hillerød, Denmark is crowdsourcing its way through a traffic jam
Facing worsening congestion and no room to build new roads, Hillerød, Denmark, turned to its residents for direction. Diverse engagement channels and AI tools helped the city identify priorities politicians hadn’t anticipated.
Published on Jan 14, 2026 by Nico Campbell
Research Radar
The NLRB Has a Data Problem. One Lawyer Is Using AI to Fix It.
U.S. labor law is shaped by thousands of decisions issued each year by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and the courts, yet much of this precedent remains difficult for workers, organizers, and even lawyers to access in practice. This piece examines how the NLRB’s fragmented document publication system creates real information barriers for workers and their advocates. A new tool, NLRB Research, uses open-source software and AI to make labor law searchable and and usable, demonstrating how improving access to public legal information can help empower workers to understand and act on their rights.
Published on Jan 13, 2026 by Dane Gambrell
AI for Governance
Using AI to Improve Public Services in New Jersey: An interview with Dave Cole
New Jersey’s Office of Innovation has received a Public Benefit Innovation Fund grant to expand its AI platform with tools that help residents access benefits faster and with fewer errors. In this conversation, Beth Simone Noveck and NJ Chief Innovation Officer Dave Cole discuss how document processing, eligibility matching, feedback analysis, and memo-generation tools are already improving programs such as Medicaid, Unemployment Insurance, and Summer EBT, and what it takes to deploy AI responsibly within government.
Published on Jan 12, 2026 by Beth Simone Noveck and Dave Cole
Global AI Watch
Can mid-sized economies come together to build frontier AI?
Conventional Wisdom presents mid-sized economies with two options for accessing advanced AI: rely on American or Chinese systems, or fall behind. Neither choice preserves the technological sovereignty that countries increasingly see as essential. But there is a third path we explore in detail in a recent memo. Collectively, nations outside the US-China duopoly possess substantial computing infrastructure, a majority of the world’s top researchers, and the growing political will to create a third path. The question is whether they can come together to make it work.
Published on Jan 7, 2026 by Elana Banin
Research Radar
Research Radar: The City as Mesh and New Ways of Organizing for Effective Problem Solving
The City as Mesh by Geoff Mulgan and Caio Werneck offers a powerful new framework for organizing cities to tackle cross-cutting challenges. This Research Radar examines their new paper and argues for going further: using AI as a coordination layer, treating skills as design choices, and leveraging public engagement as operational intelligence.