States, institutions and democratic governance
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Data driven authority and the metamorphosis of political power in the artificial intelligence economy
The emergence of data driven states marks a structural transformation in the relationship between power, institutions and public decision making. Political authority is no longer grounded exclusively in legal procedures, representation or coercive capacity, but increasingly in the systematic management of information flows, computational capability and the use of predictive models able to render social…
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Algorithmic authority and the obscuring of public decision making
In advanced economies, public authority is undergoing a silent transformation that affects the very nature of decision making power. The introduction of artificial intelligence systems into governance processes does not represent a simple technological upgrade, but a reconfiguration of the ways in which decisions are constructed, justified and made visible. The modern balance between decision,…
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The algorithm as the architecture of contemporary public order
Artificial intelligence now intervenes in the least visible yet most decisive core of the modern state: administrative rationality. It does not act as a simple tool for efficiency gains, nor as a neutral support for public action. Rather, it affects the ways in which public order is constructed, maintained and justified, redefining the relationship between…
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The algorithm as an institutional filter: decision making power and mediation in the economy of computation
The integration of artificial intelligence into public decision making processes profoundly alters the functioning of contemporary institutions. This is not a simple administrative innovation, but a systemic transformation that affects the way power is exercised, justified and made visible. Institutional decision making, historically conceived as an act of mediation among conflicting interests, regulatory constraints and…
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Faceless accountability and systemic responsibility in the era of algorithmic decision making
Accountability constitutes one of the least visible yet most decisive pillars of institutional legitimacy. It does not coincide with mere procedural compliance, but with the effective possibility of reconstructing the link between decision, responsible subject and resulting consequences. The entry of artificial intelligence into public decision making processes places precisely this link under pressure, not…
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Computational sovereignty and state capacity in the economy of artificial intelligence
Artificial intelligence does not represent a simple technological extension of public action, but a structural factor that redefines the material conditions of the exercise of state power. In the post AI economy, a state’s ability to govern markets, institutions and social processes increasingly depends on access to, control over and integration of advanced computational infrastructures.…
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Algorithmic executive power and the reconfiguration of decision making authority in the post AI state
Artificial intelligence enters the history of executive power as a factor of acceleration and structural reorganization, not as a simple administrative innovation. In contemporary institutional systems, the capacity to collect, process and interpret information in real time alters the relationship between decision, control and legitimacy. The adoption of predictive systems and advanced analytics platforms does…
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Algorithmic governance as a mutation of public decision making
The systematic entry of algorithmic models into public decision making processes marks a structural transformation of contemporary governance. This is not a simple improvement of decision support tools, but a shift in the very principle through which power is exercised. In post AI economies and institutions, decisions increasingly emerge as the result of computational procedures…
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Institutional learning and automation: the cognitive transformation of the state in the algorithmic economy
Administrative automation does not represent a simple technological upgrade of the public apparatus, but a structural shift in the way the state knows, interprets and governs economic and social reality. Even before affecting procedures and organizational charts, it modifies the cognitive grammar of public action. A state that integrates artificial intelligence systems into its decision…
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Institutions under pressure: public governance in the era of algorithmic computation
The entry of artificial intelligence into public institutions acts as a systemic stress test for the contemporary state. It does not merely introduce new operational tools, but challenges frameworks designed to govern industrial economies characterized by long time horizons, sequential processes and relatively stable margins of predictability. AI compresses decision time, expands informational complexity and…
