— Open Access Materials

Research made usable for practitioners and policy staff

Policy briefs, data sets, and plain-language explainers drawn directly from our published research—organized by topic, updated as findings are released.

/ Who this is for

These materials are written for government staff navigating regulatory decisions and informed individuals who need evidence without commissioning a full advisory mandate. Every document traces back to peer-reviewed findings.

Complexity legible, rigor intact

The gap between a published finding and a usable resource is kept short by design. When our research produces new data or revised conclusions, the corresponding brief or data set is updated within weeks.

Close-up overhead of an open policy brief document on a desk, printed data tables visible, a researcher's hand resting at the margin, cool institutional daylight from the left
Close-up overhead of an open policy brief document on a desk, printed data tables visible, a researcher's hand resting at the margin, cool institutional daylight from the left
Overhead shot of a printed data table with statistical annotations, a pencil resting across rows, cool overhead institutional lighting, clean white surface
Overhead shot of a printed data table with statistical annotations, a pencil resting across rows, cool overhead institutional lighting, clean white surface
Wide shot of a government meeting room, open notebooks and printed explainer documents on the table, participants working, cool daylight through tall windows, no faces shown
Wide shot of a government meeting room, open notebooks and printed explainer documents on the table, participants working, cool daylight through tall windows, no faces shown
Resource Categories

Three formats, one standard of evidence

Policy Briefs
Data Sets
Explainers

Findings translated for decision-makers

Raw findings, documented methodology

Plain language, no loss of precision

Concise summaries of research outputs organized by jurisdiction and topic—AI governance, regional trade agreements, cross-border data flows. Freely downloadable.

Structured data sets released alongside publications, with codebooks and methodology notes. Suitable for independent analysis, regulatory filings, and academic citation.

Topic guides written for practitioners who need to understand algorithmic governance or trade dispute mechanisms without a background in either field. Peer-reviewed for accuracy.

Need analysis beyond what a brief can carry?

Our advisory mandates go further—structured engagements for governments and institutions that require original research, legal analysis, or expert testimony on specific trade or AI governance questions.