Our programs

The Promethean Collective builds transformational capacity for Civil Society at a moment when the world itself stands on the brink of transformation. Our programs work across four interconnected pillars—each designed to evolve as Civil Society's capacity grows and as AI's societal impact deepens.

Listen grounds us in community experience and impact, ensuring accountability and responsiveness to the people Civil Society serves. By systematically documenting what works and what communities need, this pillar provides the evidence base that gives Civil Society credibility in policy debates—and tells us what our education programs should teach.

Educate provides the knowledge, context, and frameworks Civil Society needs to build competence and confidence in navigating emerging technologies. By transforming individual leaders into confident AI governance participants, this pillar creates the human foundation that makes all other work possible.

Amplify helps Civil Society actors find one another, share information and expertise, and align on areas of shared interest—strengthening the sector's internal capacity and collective voice. When Civil Society organizations can coordinate strategically they shift from isolated advocacy to unified influence.

Connect builds bridges between Civil Society and the public and private sectors, creating the relationships and coalitions needed for meaningful engagement across institutional boundaries. These connections ensure Civil Society isn't consulted after decisions are made, but participates as decisions are being shaped.

These pillars function like a gyroscope—staying balanced not by standing still, but by moving. Listen & Measure is the mount, anchoring the entire system to reality. Educate is the spinning rotor at the core, providing momentum. Amplify is the inner gimbal, making that energy portable within Civil Society. Connect is the outer gimbal, linking Civil Society to the broader world.

Each pillar is essential. Together they create a system whose internal stability makes reliable navigation possible, no matter how turbulent the waters.

A vintage brass astrolabe with intricate details and a stand, used for navigation and astronomical measurements.

How each pillar grows:

From foundation to force multiplier

Listen

This pillar evolves from "documenting the current state" to "providing the evidence base that legitimizes Civil Society as an indispensable knowledge source."

Where we start: We begin by mapping the current landscape—documenting who's at the table in AI governance conversations and whose `voices are systematically excluded. We initiate small-scale data collection projects with handfuls of Civil Society organizations, asking them to share what they're experiencing as AI enters their work. We're learning what questions to ask and building the analytical frameworks that will let us make sense of what we hear.

Where we're headed: Over time, this becomes a systematic global intelligence-gathering operation. We maintain living indices of Civil Society's role in AI governance across regions and sectors. We run longitudinal studies tracking how communities experience AI's impacts over years, not months. We produce annual assessments that shape how funders allocate resources, how policymakers frame problems, and how Civil Society itself understands its own collective capacity. We create feedback loops where what we learn from community implementation directly informs policy design.

Educate

This pillar evolves from "teaching individuals AI basics" to "creating self-sustaining learning ecosystems where Civil Society develops its own expertise pipelines."

Where we start: We launch pilot training programs in specific Civil Society sectors, testing curriculum and refining our approach based on what participants actually need. We're delivering hands-on workshops for small cohorts—giving leaders practical AI literacy they can immediately apply to their work. We're figuring out what "AI competence" means for organizations working on refugee rights versus environmental justice versus labor organizing.

Where we're headed: Let's be clear: with 10 million Civil Society organizations globally, we'll be running individual training programs for decades. But the nature of that training evolves dramatically. We develop recognized certification pathways where experienced participants become trainers themselves, creating cascading capacity within regions and sectors. We build specialized advanced tracks for organizations ready to go deep on AI policy, technical auditing, or community-centered design. We partner with universities and foundations to embed AI literacy into existing Civil Society professional development infrastructure.

Amplify

This pillar evolves from "helping organizations find each other" to "enabling sector-wide strategic coordination at scale."

Where we start: We convene small gatherings where Civil Society organizations meet peers working on parallel challenges—creating spaces where an organization working on algorithmic bias in hiring discovers natural allies working on criminal justice algorithms. We facilitate structured peer learning where organizations share what's worked and what hasn't. We build repositories of case studies and best practices, making knowledge portable across organizational boundaries.

Where we're headed: This becomes the infrastructure for Civil Society's collective strategic coherence. We convene global symposiums that bring together organizations from dozens of countries to set shared priorities and coordinate campaigns. We run structured mentorship programs connecting emerging organizations with veterans who've navigated similar challenges. We produce annual "State of Civil Society & AI" assessments that give the sector shared language for articulating its role and impact. Most importantly, we help organizations discover not only natural allies but also unexpected coalition partners—groups whose missions differ but whose strategic interests align in specific AI governance battles.

Connect

This pillar evolves from "facilitating occasional conversations" to "institutionalizing Civil Society as an equal partner in shaping AI's trajectory."

Where we start: We establish small, recurring forums—"agora assemblies"—that bring Civil Society into direct dialogue with policymakers and technology developers. We create alert systems so organizations learn about relevant AI policy developments before comment periods close. We facilitate introductions between underrepresented Civil Society organizations and decision-makers who need their perspectives. We're building relationships one conversation at a time.

Where we're headed: This transforms into standing infrastructure for multi-stakeholder governance. Civil Society gains permanent seats in AI governance forums rather than one-off consultation opportunities. We maintain open-access platforms where any stakeholder can track patterns in Civil Society engagement and participation. We broker working groups where Civil Society organizations collaborate directly with government agencies and AI labs on implementation challenges—not just critiquing from outside but helping solve problems from within. And through our Quid Pro Co initiative, we will embed AI graduates and mid-career professionals directly within Civil Society organizations, helping them build transformational and sustainable AI tools that serve their missions. This doesn't just connect Civil Society to external expertise—it builds internal technical capacity that makes organizations genuine partners rather than perpetual clients.

All of this work supports our only final objective:

AI will only serve all of humanity if Civil Society has the legitimacy to convene critical conversations, not just participate in those initiated by the public or private sector.

At the very least, this legitimacy relies on widespread capacity amongs CSOs to effectively identify and document emergent harms, articulate the needs of affected communities, and to negotiate with both public and private decision makers.

AI that serves the common good

Each of our pillars reinforces the others, allowing our programs to be a flywheel for Civil Society legitimacy.

Listen teaches us what Educate should teach, and to whom. When we document what Civil Society organizations actually encounter as AI enters their work, we discover what literacy they need—not theoretical understanding but practical competence for the problems they're facing now.

Educate provides the knowledge, frameworks, and context that allow Civil Society leaders to confidently voice their own expertise and valus. When organizations understand AI's possibilities and risks, they can articulate how technology should serve their communities' needs—not defer to technical experts who lack community context. Amplify is where these confident Civil Society voices find natural allies and unexpected coalition partners, transforming individual organizational insight into coordinated sector-wide influence

Amplify builds the collective voice that makes Connect impactful. Individual organizations can be ignored; coordinated coalitions demand response. When Civil Society speaks with strategic coherence, policymakers and developers must engage substantively.

Connect creates the influence that validates Listen's insights. When Civil Society has standing seats in governance forums, the lived experience we document gains weight. Policymakers treat community feedback as essential intelligence, not optional consultation.

This creates three interconnected mechanisms that shift power dynamics:

First, legitimacy through competence. When Civil Society leaders can engage substantively with technical AI concepts, challenge assumptions based on community realities, and propose implementable solutions, they earn credibility that transforms "stakeholder consultation" from box-checking into genuine influence.

Second, coordination at scale. Individual organizations advocating in isolation rarely move systems. But when Civil Society organizations discover shared interests, align on strategy, and speak with coordinated voices, they gain the negotiating power to shape decisions alongside government regulators and corporate developers.

Third, governance grounded in reality. Policymakers and AI developers often design solutions without understanding how communities actually experience technology. By systematically documenting lived experience and translating it into actionable insights, we ensure AI governance reflects human flourishing across all its dimensions—not just technical possibility or market incentives.

As these pillars mature, they don't just make existing governance processes more inclusive—they fundamentally shift who gets to define what problems AI should solve and whose flourishing counts as success. That's how growing Civil Society capacity makes it more likely that AI serves all humanity.

We don't believe Civil Society needs to be rigid to be strong. Instead, we help organizations stay oriented through rapid technological change.

Our programs are built to help Civil Society actors — both organizations & individuals— cultivate habits of learning, collaboration, and reflection, habits that allow them to bend without breaking, develop new capabilities sustainably.