AI Insights for Policymakers

The AI Insights for Policymakers Program provides a platform for policymakers and scientists to have timely and meaningful interactions to inform their thinking around AI and policy.

Logo CIFAR and Mila

Overview

The AI information space is noisy, often highly technical, and full of competing claims and vested interests. Finding reliable, independent and, above all, relevant insights is challenging. This rings especially true for policymakers who are grappling with how best to approach, regulate or leverage AI for the public interest despite having limited access to technical AI expertise and no clear mechanism to engage with scientific experts.

The AI Insights for Policymakers Program addresses this gap by providing a platform for policymakers and scientists to have timely and meaningful interactions on key issues. Ultimately, we seek to bolster evidence-based policies across Canada by enabling policymakers to tap into the breadth and depth of the Canadian AI ecosystem’s knowledge. 

Through a combination of "office hours" with the expert group, as well as more in-depth policy feasibility testing exercises, the AI Insights for Policymakers Program will connect policymakers with relevant experts to inform their thinking around AI and policy.

The Expert Group

We recruited a diverse group of 12 AI experts with wide-ranging expertise, led by two co-chairs from the Canadian AI scientific community. 

The primary mandate of the Expert Group is to provide targeted technical and socio-technical advice. Drawing on their expertises, they will provide advice and relevant knowledge to policymakers at all levels of government on specific challenges. 

Additionally, the AI Insights for Policymakers Program is led by a secretariat based out of Mila and CIFAR, and can draw on experts in the broader Canadian AI ecosystem on a timely basis.

How to Connect With the Expert Group 

Office Hours

The AI Insights for Policymakers Program organizes free and independent in-person or virtual office hours, as well as two in-person sessions in different cities across Canada. Through the office hours, policymakers have the chance to sit down with the expert group made up of Canadian AI scientists to openly discuss their challenges relating to AI and Policy, helping them build their thinking around complex issues. 

Dates and location for upcoming office hours
  • In-person and virtual: October 9 and 10, 2025 in Ottawa
  • Virtual Office hours: March, 2026
  • In-person and virtual: Early June, 2026 in Montreal

Sign up here

Send an email to the team

Policy Feasibility Testing

As AI-related policy initiatives ramp-up across Canada, the AI Insights for Policymakers Program will offer policy feasibility testing services to ensure more robust AI policies, reviewed through a technical  lens.  

If you are interested in bringing a draft policy proposal to the expert group, contact us by email.

Contact us

three professionals around a computer drafting a policy proposal
Advisory Committee
Lisa Austin (Professor, University of Toronto, Faculty of Law)
Anneke Olvera (Director, Standards Council of Canada)
Marc Saner (Professor, University of Ottawa and Departmental Science Advisor, NRCan)
Mark Schaan (Deputy Secretary to the Cabinet - Artificial Intelligence, PCO)
Graham Taylor (Professor, University of Guelph)
Rachel Wernick (Fellow, Public Policy Forum)
Secretariat
Brent Baron (Chief of Staff, AI, CIFAR)
Anna Jahn (Senior Director, Public Policy and Inclusion, Mila)
Filippo Maria Sposini (AI Program Manager, CIFAR)
Henri Vilandre (Policy Analyst, Public Policy and Inclusion, Mila)