The EU AI Act, enforcing significant penalties for noncompliance, seeks to regulate high-risk AI systems, emphasizing moral governance alongside technical compliance. While necessary, this framework lacks moral architecture, risking harm despite adherence to rules. Builders must prioritize community needs to ensure AI systems serve and do not exclude vulnerable populations.
Tag: Harvard Kennedy School
The Case for Clear Spheres of Influence — Why Ambiguity Gets the Weak Killed
Adebayo Alonge argues that hegemony is essential for global stability and the protection of the weak. Misunderstanding hegemony as merely oppressive ignores its capacity to maintain order and prevent chaos. He calls for a power that exercises authority morally and institutionally to support development in unstable regions, emphasizing that absence of hegemony leads to greater suffering.
The Rules-Based Order Is a Noble Fiction
The author argues that true power requires both moral clarity and enforcement to protect vulnerable populations. Reflecting on personal experiences and historical lessons, they emphasize the chaos that arises in the absence of a strong hegemony while advocating for an American-led world order as a means of survival and stability.


