Who benefits from artificial intelligence — and who bears the...
Read MoreABOUT THE INSTITUTE
Independent research in service of human dignity
The Digital Dignity Institute is a new kind of research institute — one that takes seriously both the rigour of scholarship and the urgency of policy.
At a Glance
Founded to address the structural gap between the pace of digital change and the adequacy of the governance frameworks meant to shape it.
TYPE
Independent Research Institute
FOCUS
Digital Rights, AI Governance, Platform Accountability
APPROACH
Interdisciplinary, Rigorous, Policy-relevant
Mission
Our Mission
The Digital Dignity Institute produces rigorous, independent research and policy analysis to advance a vision of digital futures grounded in human dignity. We exist to close the gap between what digital systems are and what they should be — held accountable to the people whose lives they shape.
We believe that scholarship has a responsibility to the world it studies. Our work is oriented not only towards understanding but towards intervention — contributing ideas, frameworks, and evidence to debates where the stakes are high and the quality of analysis matters.
Thesis
Our Founding Thesis
The dominant discourse around digital technology has been shaped by interests that systematically undervalue what is at stake for ordinary people. Frameworks of innovation, efficiency, and market competition have crowded out frameworks of rights, accountability, and collective governance.
This is not an accident. It reflects the concentration of resources, influence, and institutional power in the hands of actors with a direct stake in limited governance. The intellectual case for a different kind of digital future exists — but it requires patient, rigorous development, and institutions willing to make it.
The DDI is such an institution. We operate with independence from both state and commercial interest. We are guided by the conviction that the long-term conditions for human flourishing in digital societies require both better knowledge and better policy — and that these are complementary, not competing, pursuits.
Formation
Institute Formation Statement
The Digital Dignity Institute was established in 2025 as an independent research organisation. It was founded in the recognition that the critical moment in AI and platform governance demanded a dedicated institution oriented explicitly around human dignity as a governing principle.
The Institute is constituted as an independent entity, operating without affiliation to any government, corporation, or political organisation. Its intellectual independence is foundational to its credibility and its purpose.
The DDI is in active development. We are building our research network, developing our first programme of work, and establishing the institutional partnerships that will sustain long-term research capacity. We welcome interest from researchers, practitioners, and organisations committed to advancing the field.
Vision
Our Vision
We envision a world in which digital systems are designed, governed, and held accountable to the full scope of human dignity — in which people have meaningful control over their digital identities and data; in which algorithmic decisions that affect lives are transparent, contestable, and fair; in which the extraordinary productive potential of digital technology is oriented towards the common good rather than the extraction of private value.
That world will not arrive without work. It requires new legal and normative frameworks. It requires governance institutions with the knowledge and independence to act. It requires a community of researchers and practitioners willing to do the unglamorous, painstaking work of building the intellectual foundations on which better policy can rest.
The Digital Dignity Institute exists to do that work.
Research Highlights
Digital Identity in the Age of Data
Who controls identity in digital systems — and why it...
Read MoreThe Accountability Gap in Algorithmic Decision-Making
Why automated systems must be subject to democratic oversight Introduction...
Read More