Horizon Institute for Public Service
webCredibility Rating
Good quality. Reputable source with community review or editorial standards, but less rigorous than peer-reviewed venues.
Rating inherited from publication venue: Founders Pledge
This Founders Pledge report evaluates the Horizon Institute for Public Service, which places technical AI and biosecurity experts into U.S. government roles, addressing the critical talent gap that hampers effective AI governance and policy-making.
Metadata
Summary
Founders Pledge evaluates the Horizon Institute for Public Service, a nonprofit bridging the gap between technical experts and U.S. government by placing AI and biosecurity subject matter experts into federal and policy roles. With 50+ fellows placed at a 100% placement rate and 100% retention in public service post-fellowship, Horizon is assessed as a strong bet for improving emerging technology governance capacity. The report highlights the urgent need for technical expertise in government as AI regulation accelerates.
Key Points
- •Less than 1% of AI PhD graduates enter government, leaving policymakers ill-equipped to craft effective AI regulations.
- •Horizon has placed 50+ fellows across key U.S. policy institutions including State Dept, Commerce, HHS, Congress, and major think tanks.
- •100% placement rate and 100% post-fellowship retention in public service roles demonstrate strong program effectiveness.
- •Horizon addresses both over- and under-regulation risks by improving scientific literacy among policymakers on both sides of the aisle.
- •Additional funding can scale the fellowship program, career support resources, and workshops at emergingtechpolicy.org.
2 FactBase facts citing this source
| Entity | Property | Value | As Of |
|---|---|---|---|
| Horizon Institute for Public Service | Grant Received | $11.8 million | Jan 2023 |
| Horizon Institute for Public Service | Grant Received | $2.9 million | Jan 2022 |
Cached Content Preview
Horizon Institute for Public Service The Horizon Institute for Public Service is a nonprofit organization that helps to bridge the talent gap between highly qualified technical experts and the U.S. government, in order to help Congress, the Executive Branch, and the wider U.S. policy ecosystem better navigate rapid technological change. As part of this work, Horizon runs several programs, including its Horizon Fellowship to train and place subject matter experts on AI and biosecurity in the U.S. federal government or think tanks. Horizon also organizes workshops , provides tailored career support , and creates in-depth guides on working in U.S. emerging technology policy via its career website emergingtechpolicy.org .
Powerful technologies are advancing rapidly, but the U.S. government lacks the expertise to adequately understand these technologies and craft smart policy. As an example, less than 1% of AI PhD graduates enter government and experts agree that policymakers lack relevant expertise , even as the government proposes sweeping regulations on AI.
Policymakers on both sides of the aisle recognize this problem:
“The pace with which [technology] is moving is so fast and the relative lack of expertise in government is such that we’re constantly playing catch-up.” - Secretary of State Antony Blinken
Congress “doesn’t know what the hell it’s doing” with AI and “I think the median age in the Senate is about 142. This is not a tech savvy group” – Senator Ted Cruz
(Importantly, better scientific and technological literacy in the U.S. government can help to protect against both over- and under-regulation of highly consequential advanced technology. Congress and federal agencies already regulate AI and other advanced technologies and will do so more in the future; the question will be how well those regulations are crafted.)
But the public sector can’t solve this talent problem alone — government hiring processes are slow, difficult to navigate, and pay much lower rates for scientists and technologists than the private sector. Horizon is an organization that aims to help bridge the emerging tech talent gap, building a robust pipeline of subject-matter expertise—experts with outstanding scientific expertise, quantitative skills, and deep understanding of new technologies —into public service.
Horizon has a track record of securing top positions for experts via its flagship policy fellowship, a focus on the most consequential technologies, and a strong team and network (see, e.g. its high-powered bipartisan advisory board ), making it one of the best bets for supporting emerging talent in this space. Horizon has placed 50+ fellows into public policy roles to date. These fellows are placed across key parts of the U.S. policy ecosystem, including the Department of State, Department of Commerce, Department of Health and Human Services, the House of Representatives, the Senate, and influential think tanks, like Brookings, the Carnegie
... (truncated, 5 KB total)kb-6d5fbbe9e51121ce | Stable ID: sid_5NgIwbLvDV