<b>ENDORSEMENTS</b><br /><br />“This book offers a hopeful, practical vision: Technology serving the public, not the privileged. A must-read for anyone shaping our digital future.”<br /><b>—Audrey Tang, first Minister of Digital Affairs of Taiwan</b><br /><br />“A panoramic and thorough survey, <i>Rewiring Democracy</i> provides an original and imaginative take on the impacts of AI on democracy. It’s full of brilliant nuggets of extrapolation. I really enjoyed it.”<br /><b>—Mustafa Suleyman, CEO, Microsoft AI; author of <i>The Coming Wave</i></b><br /><br />“<i>Rewiring Democracy</i> is the rare AI book that pairs deep technical insight with a pragmatic roadmap for safeguarding democracy and turning anxiety into action. Clear, constructive, and quietly optimistic, this is essential reading for anyone determined to steer AI toward the public good.”<br /><b>—Beth Noveck, Founder, The Governance Lab and Professor of Law and Experiential AI, Northeastern University</b><br /><br />“A thoughtful and rigorous exploration of democracy as an information system and AI’s potential impacts on decision making, advocacy, and governance at all levels. Essential reading for government leaders who want to strengthen democracy with emerging technologies.”<br /><b>—Ann Lewis, former Director of Technology Transformation Services, U.S. General Services Administration</b><br /><br />“While Schneier and Sanders are more optimistic than I am about the future of artificial intelligence and policy, you will be glad to have taken the time to read and understand their well-articulated arguments.”<br /><b>—Vint Cerf, internet pioneer</b><br /><br />“For AI companies or politicians to serve democracy, people must take deliberate steps. <i>Rewiring Democracy</i> offers a clear roadmap to help public and corporate leaders navigate through the pitfalls and promises that AI brings to democracy.”<br /><b>—Marietje Schaake, former Member of the European Parliament; author of <i>The Tech Coup</i></b>
Introduction
1. Core AI Capabilities
2. Democracy as an Information System
Part I: AI-Assisted Politics
3. Background: Making Mistakes
4. Talking to Voters
5. Conducting Polls
6. Organizing a Political Campaign
7. Fundraising for Politics
8. Being a Politician
Part II: AI-Assisted Legislators
9. Background: Explaining Itself
10. Background: Who’s to Blame?
11. Listening to Constituents
12. Writing Laws
13. Writing More Complex Laws
14. Writing Laws that Empower Machines
15. Negotiating Legislation
Part III: The AI-Assisted Administration
16. Background: Exhibiting Values and Bias
17. Background: Augmenting Versus Replacing People
18. Serving People
19. Operating Government
20. Enforcing Regulations
Part IV: The AI-Assisted Court
21. Background: Being Fair
22. Background: Getting Hacked
23. Acting as a Lawyer
24. Arbitrating Disputes
25. Enforcing the Law
26. Reshaping Legislative Intent
27. Being a Judge
Part V: AI-Assisted Citizens
28. Background: AI and Power
29. Background: AI and Trust
30. Explaining the News
31. Watching the Government
32. Moderating, Facilitating, and Building Consensus
33. Acting as Your Personal Advocate
34. Acting as Your Personal Political Proxy
Part VI: Ensuring That AI Benefits Democracy
35. Why AI is Not Yet Good for Democracy
36. How to Ensure AI is Good for Democracy
37. What We Need to Do Now
38. Conclusion