Most AI discussions around government focus on writing or improving policies.
What if the real problem is different?
Governments already have thousands of:
- Laws
- Rules
- Policies
- Scheme guidelines
- Budgets
- Audit reports
- Public dashboards
- RTIs
- Citizen grievances
The challenge isn't creating more policy—it's understanding whether existing policies are actually being implemented.
Imagine an open-source AI framework that maps:
(Department → Laws → Rules → Policies → Schemes → Budget → Implementation → Audit Findings → Citizen Evidence → Compliance Status)
Instead of asking:
"How can we improve this policy?"
It asks:
- What obligations already exist?
- Who is responsible?
- What evidence is available?
- Is the policy being implemented as intended?
- Where are the compliance gaps?
The output isn't opinions—it's evidence-backed governance intelligence.
The long-term vision would be an open framework that anyone could adapt to their own jurisdiction by plugging in local laws, policies, and public datasets.
Has anyone seen a project attempting something like this? If you were building it today with AI agents, RAG, knowledge graphs, and open government data, how would you design the architecture? This is just an idea I'm exploring, not a fully thought-out solution. All comments, critiques, and insights are welcome.
United States
NORTH AMERICA
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