AI Policy Bulletin is scaling up
And we want to hear from you
After a year as a volunteer-run initiative, AI Policy Bulletin now has a full-time managing editor.
I’m Nicky Lovegrove. I’ll be drawing on my experience editing academic articles for policy audiences and 7 years working in government and diplomacy.
Since launching in early 2025, AI Policy Bulletin has published 22 articles covering everything from chip smuggling and compute governance, to great power competition and novel AI risks. Our 1000+ subscribers include professionals from government bodies, think tanks and universities across the US, UK, EU and beyond.
This comes at a time when reasoned and risk-informed AI policy ideas are needed most. AI governance discourse has rapidly swelled with Substacks, tweets and LinkedIn posts, and it’s tricky to find the signal in the noise.
As editor, I’m focused on quickly moving the best ideas in AI governance into credible and accessible content. Unlike most outlets, all our articles are peer-reviewed by our network of AI governance experts, and include actionable recommendations or insights for policymakers.
What this means:
If you’re a researcher or practitioner: We want to help land your ideas with policy audiences. Pitch to us here.
If you work in policy: Share AI Policy Bulletin content with your colleagues – and let us know what topics you’d like us to cover.
If you have AI governance expertise: Apply to join our review network (we compensate you for your time).
Got feedback on AI Policy Bulletin? We’d love to hear from you.


Congrats on this milestone. The peer review angle is what sets this apart from most policy newsletters floating around. When I see think tank folks circulating half-baked hot takes on LinkedIn, having a publication that actually vets content before it reaches policymakers feels like a breathof fresh air.