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Technological Sovereignty
tech_sovereignty · Cross-jurisdiction AI-governance topic
Source: https://policywindow.org/wiki/tech-sovereignty
Generated 2026-05-30T22:14:30 UTC
Summary
National policies asserting domestic capability + decision-making over AI infrastructure: compute on shore, domestic foundation models, talent retention, export-control reciprocity. Specifically NOT 'sovereign AI' (which focuses on deployment restrictions) — sovereignty here is about productive capacity.
At a glance
- Instruments governing
- 3
- Instruments in conflict
- 0
- Instruments silent
- 20
- Contested question
- Can mid-sized economies sustain frontier-tier AI capability domestically, or does the compute-cost curve favour US/CN/EU only? Active debate in India, Brazil, ASEAN policy literatures.
How to cite this article
APA
Policy Window. (n.d.). Technological Sovereignty [Wiki article — Topic]. https://policywindow.org/wiki/tech-sovereignty
Chicago
Policy Window. n.d.. "Technological Sovereignty." Wiki article (Topic). https://policywindow.org/wiki/tech-sovereignty.
Harvard
Policy Window (n.d.) 'Technological Sovereignty', Wiki article — Topic, available at: https://policywindow.org/wiki/tech-sovereignty.
OSCOLA
Policy Window, 'Technological Sovereignty' (Wiki article — Topic, n.d.) <https://policywindow.org/wiki/tech-sovereignty> accessed [date].
BibTeX
@misc{policywindow-tech-sovereignty,
title = {Technological Sovereignty},
author = {Policy Window},
year = {n.d.},
howpublished = {Cross-jurisdiction policy topic, tech_sovereignty},
url = {https://policywindow.org/wiki/tech-sovereignty},
note = {Primary source: https://policywindow.org/wiki/tech-sovereignty}
}