The ARI Policy Department is the organization's product development engine, responsible for the ideation and design of the policy frameworks, concepts, and analytical tools that define ARI's advocacy agenda and advance responsible AI governance. The Department's core work is deliberately proactive: rather than reacting to a legislative calendar set by others, we identify consequential policy questions before they reach Congress and develop durable frameworks that outlast any single bill or news cycle. Our aspiration is not merely to participate in the AI policy debate, but to shape it, generating the ideas that others eventually have to respond to. The Economic & Societal Transformation Portfolio sits at the intersection of technology and human welfare, focusing on how artificial intelligence is reshaping the foundations of how Americans work, learn, and access essential services. Policy Analysts in this portfolio develop ARI's positions and help advance advocacy efforts on AI-related economic policy, labor displacement, workforce transition, the future and dignity of work, education policy, government modernization, and responsible AI adoption across high-stakes sectors such as healthcare and finance. The portfolio's organizing question is whether emerging AI policy can deliver transformative economic gains without degrading the human condition. That framing reflects ARI's commitment to policies that raise standards of living and promote broad-based opportunity for all, while proactively addressing concerns about job disruption and other economic and societal risks. Work in this portfolio requires comfort operating across economic, social, and institutional dimensions of AI policy, and an ability to engage both near-term regulatory questions and over-the-horizon structural challenges facing workers, communities, and public institutions. Policy Analysts are the intellectual engine of the department. Working within assigned portfolio focus areas, analysts are responsible for the research, policy design, and analytical work that gives ARI's advocacy its substantive foundation. This means developing deep expertise in specific issue areas, tracking legislative and regulatory developments, designing policy frameworks, and producing work products that are simultaneously rigorous in their analysis and clear in their advocacy orientation. Analysts at ARI are not generalists; their proximity to the substance of their focus areas makes them the department's primary source of policy insight, and their output is the raw material from which ARI's broader advocacy agenda is constructed. Given the breadth of the Economic & Societal Transformation portfolio, incoming analysts are not expected to arrive as experts in every focus area; they are expected to bring relevant foundational training, strong policy design instincts, and a willingness to specialize as the portfolio's agenda matures. The day-to-day work of a Policy Analyst at ARI can vary significantly; those seeking a predictable routine or prolonged periods of independent research may be ill-fitted for the position. In any given day, a Policy Analyst may find themselves briefing Congressional staff on an advocacy agenda item germane to their portfolio, drafting a blog post to demonstrate thought leadership on a controversial policy idea, preparing an internal memorandum for ARI’s executive leadership to help inform a bill endorsement decision, and/or doing deep research to help support the earliest stages of the policy design process. In all cases, the work of a Policy Analyst requires drive, teamwork, and the ability to “code switch” between policy design (the science of putting together strong policy frameworks that serve as the backbone of ARI’s advocacy efforts) and policy delivery (the art of taking approved policy objectives and driving them toward manifestation through collaborative, interdisciplinary work with colleagues from the Government Affairs and Communications teams). Policy Analysts have a critical role to play in both.
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Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Entry Level