Technical AI Governance Programme

Hosted by the Oxford Martin AI Governance Initiative (AIGI) and the Department of Engineering Science at the University of Oxford, the programme is a first-of-its-kind effort to bridge the gap between cutting-edge AI research and effective governance.

Technical AI Governance Programme

AI governance requires not only thoughtful policy design but also deep technical understanding. Yet, training and research at this intersection have been chronically underdeveloped. Our programme addresses this need by bringing together leading researchers from engineering, computer science, and policy to advance the technical foundations of safe, accountable, and well-governed AI systems. By combining cutting-edge science with real-world policy insight, it seeks to deliver practical solutions to some of the most pressing challenges of our time.

We conduct high-impact, interdisciplinary research on the technical dimensions of AI governance in collaboration with DPhil students and faculty members in Computer Science and Engineering. WE aim to build the world’s leading centre for technical AI governance research and training, nurturing a new generation of scholars fluent in both AI technology and its societal implications.

Technical AI Governance (TAIG) DPhil Studentships
A world-leading studentship opportunity at the intersection of AI, engineering, computer science, and public policy

Technical AI Governance (TAIG) DPhil Studentships are a first-of-their-kind opportunity for doctoral study that are designed to train researchers who can bridge the gap between advanced AI systems and effective governance. Affiliated with the technical branch of the Oxford Martin AI Governance Initiative (AIGI), at the University of Oxford, which is co-directed by Prof. Robert Trager and Prof. Michael A. Osborne, the studentships combine rigorous technical research with deep engagement in policy, law, and societal impact.

Modern AI governance problems are fundamentally technical. Questions about compute oversight, privacy-preserving transparency, model evaluation, and standards development require researchers who are fluent in both AI systems and the mechanisms used to govern them. TAIG DPhil Studentships exist to train those researchers and to support them in conducting high-impact projects with real-world implications.