Inaugural · 2026 · Open access
  Inaugural call for papers · rolling submissions
Volume
01·
Inaugural 2026
From the Press

AI Journal Press publishes peer-reviewed, open-access journals at the intersection of artificial intelligence, the social sciences, the humanities, and law.

Journals
02+
in publication, growing
Authors & readers Read the journals
Inaugural call

Submissions open across both journals — IJAISSH & IJAILSS.

DOUBLE-BLIND PEER REVIEW · ~14 DAYS TO FIRST DECISION
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0
Journals in publication
II
0d
Median first decision
III
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Open access · CC BY
IV
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Blind review rounds
№ 01 · The journals

Independent titles, edited rigorously.

All journals →
№ 02 · Editorial scope

What we publish.

Submission guidelines →
IJAISSH · Social sciences & humanities

Artificial intelligence in governance, culture, and public discourse.

SCOPE · IJAISSH

Original research on how AI reshapes governance, economic activity, cultural production, public discourse, and ethical decision-making. We welcome empirical, theoretical, and case-based work from the social sciences and humanities.

OPEN ACCESS · CC BY 4.0Submit to IJAISSH →
IJAILSS · Law & social sciences

Where AI meets law, regulation, and human rights.

SCOPE · IJAILSS

A platform for the convergence of AI, legal studies, and the social sciences — examining regulatory frameworks, governance, human rights, and ethics. Comparative work across jurisdictions is especially welcome.

OPEN ACCESS · CC BY 4.0Submit to IJAILSS →
Both journals · Open call

Inaugural volume — submissions invited from scholars and practitioners.

CALL FOR PAPERS · 2026

Original, unpublished research articles of 5,000–10,000 words. Double-blind peer review, ~14 days to first decision, no author-side fees. Rolling submissions throughout the year.

ROLLING · YEAR-ROUNDBegin submission →
№ 03 · Open call

Contribute to the scholarship of intelligence.

We invite original, unpublished research from scholars, practitioners, and policymakers. All submissions undergo rigorous double-blind peer review.

5,000–10,000Research articles
Double-blindPeer review
~14 daysTo first decision
Open call
Year-round
Rolling peer review
Submit when your work is ready. First decision typically in ~14 days.
№ 04 · Editorial

Stewarded by scholars.

Senior editorial team forming — applications from prospective associate editors and reviewers welcomed at contact.

Join the board →
Editor-in-Chief · Photo
HEADSHOT
to be inserted
Editor-in-Chief · IJAISSH & IJAILSS

Christine Gibson

AI governance researcher · regulatory frameworks & comparative policy

Fellowship
Georgia Tech
AI Safety Governance Fellow
Affiliation
University of Oxford
Continuing scholarship in online education & AI policy

Christine Gibson is an AI governance researcher with fellowships at the European Institute for Policy Research and Human Rights (EIROS), the European Network for AI Safety (ENAIS), and the Georgia Tech AI Safety Governance Fellowship.

Her research focuses on EU AI Act regulatory frameworks — particularly Articles 57–59 on regulatory sandboxes — and comparative AI governance across the EU, UK, and East Africa. Drawing on a foundational background in social anthropology and Swahili studies (BA and MRes, SOAS), she brings an interdisciplinary and equity-centred perspective to the governance of emerging technologies.

She has forthcoming publications on UK post-Brexit AI governance in employment (Routledge) and on autonomous vehicles and employment displacement. Christine is a member of the CODI Working Group and is actively involved in international scholarship on the intersection of AI policy, human rights, and digital inclusion.

Memberships: EIROS ENAIS Georgia Tech AI Safety CODI Working Group SOAS · BA & MRes
View on LinkedIn Forthcoming · Routledge volume on UK post-Brexit AI governance