AI Summary of Peer-Reviewed Research

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Global AI governance shows consensus around three principles

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Overhead view of scattered documents and papers spread across a white surface, with handwritten notes visible on various sheets, suggesting an active review or planning session.
Research area:LawEthics and Social Impacts of AIPolitical Science and International Relations

What the study found

The study found an emerging consensus across global AI governance documents around three core principles: Safety, Human-centric, and Fairness. It also found tensions between state and non-state actors, and between agreement in language and the practical implementation of that language.

Why the authors say this matters

The authors conclude that treating governance texts as dynamic semiotic systems helps move beyond the hard law–soft law dichotomy. They present their work as a theoretical basis for advancing more inclusive and operational governance models.

What the researchers tested

The researchers used a sociosemiotic perspective to examine how normative consensus and legitimacy are constructed in global AI governance discourse. They drew on a corpus of 47 international normative documents and analysed how the three principles were semiotically encoded.

What worked and what didn't

The study found that Safety is often framed through securitisation discourse, while Human-centric is increasingly grounded in international human rights frameworks. It also reports that nominalisation can create surface-level consensus, but this may introduce ambiguity that undermines enforceability.

What to keep in mind

The abstract does not describe detailed limitations of the study. The findings are based on 47 international normative documents and on discourse analysis, so the summary is limited to that corpus and approach.

Key points

  • The study identified cross-textual consensus around Safety, Human-centric, and Fairness in global AI governance documents.
  • Safety was often framed through securitisation discourse.
  • Human-centric was increasingly linked to international human rights frameworks.
  • Nominalisation helped create apparent agreement but also added ambiguity.
  • The abstract reports tensions between state and non-state actors and between language and implementation.

Disclosure

Research title:
Global AI governance shows consensus around three principles
Authors:
Jiaxuan Qiu, Le Cheng
Publication date:
2026-04-06
OpenAlex record:
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AI provenance: This post was generated by gpt-5.4-mini (OpenAI). The original authors did not write or review this post.