Deadline extension 20 March: Global call for ‘Governing with Artificial Intelligence’: Share your initiatives and insights on AI-driven innovation in government
OECD's global AI-in-government collection could benchmark Australian practice internationally — agencies should assess whether to contribute.
Key points
- OECD invites governments to submit AI use cases, policy initiatives, and implementation tools by 20 March 2026.
- Australian agencies could contribute examples of AI governance practice, potentially shaping OECD comparative outputs.
- Extracted content is brief; full submission scope and intended outputs are unclear from available text.
Implications for Australian agencies
- Consider Agencies with mature AI governance or use-case examples may want to consider whether contributing to the OECD call aligns with their international engagement objectives.
- Monitor Policy teams may want to monitor outputs from this OECD initiative as a source of comparative government AI practice and potential benchmarking material.
Implications are AI-generated. Starting points, not advice — see methodology for how they're framed.
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Weekly digest, 23 February 2026
"Deadline extension 20 March: Global call for ‘Governing with Artificial Intelligence’: Share your initiatives and insights on AI-driven innovation in government"
Source: OECD AI Wonk Blog
Published: 1 March 2026
URL: https://wp.oecd.ai/call-ai-in-gov/
The OECD has issued a global call for submissions under a 'Governing with Artificial Intelligence' initiative, with a deadline extended to 20 March 2026. Governments are invited to share AI use cases, policy initiatives, and implementation tools relevant to trustworthy AI in public administration. The call appears designed to build a comparative evidence base that could inform OECD guidance and peer-learning outputs. The extracted content is limited, so the full scope, selection criteria, and intended publications are not confirmed.
Implications for Australian agencies:
- [Consider] Agencies with mature AI governance or use-case examples may want to consider whether contributing to the OECD call aligns with their international engagement objectives.
- [Monitor] Policy teams may want to monitor outputs from this OECD initiative as a source of comparative government AI practice and potential benchmarking material.
Retrieved from SIMS, 18 July 2026.