Establishes international AI research partnerships, encouraging U.S. cities to collaborate with international counterparts while aligning with U.S. research priorities. Prohibits partnerships with cities in countries of concern. Limits research to non-national security areas. Allocates $20 million annually for implementation.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a proposed federal statute (bill) from the United States Congress that, if enacted, would create binding legal obligations with appropriated funding, reporting requirements, and specific authorities granted to the Secretary of State.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, with limited focus on competitive dynamics (6.4) and governance failure (6.5). The primary emphasis is on establishing international AI research partnerships rather than addressing specific AI risks or harms. Most risk subdomains are not mentioned.
This document primarily governs activities in the Scientific Research and Development Services sector through its establishment of AI research partnerships. It also has implications for Public Administration (excluding National Security) through the role of the Secretary of State and coordination with federal agencies. The document explicitly excludes national security applications.
The document focuses primarily on the Plan and Design stage of AI research partnerships, with some coverage of Build and Use Model through research activities. It does not substantially address data collection, verification/validation, deployment, or operational monitoring of AI systems themselves, but rather the establishment and management of research partnerships.
The document explicitly mentions artificial intelligence and artificial intelligence research partnerships. It references the National AI Research Resource and discusses translational AI research. However, it does not specifically mention AI models, AI systems, frontier AI, general purpose AI, foundation models, generative AI, predictive AI, open-weight models, or compute thresholds.
United States Congress; Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America
The document is a bill proposed by the United States Congress, as indicated by the opening legislative language and the structure of the document as federal legislation.
Secretary of State; Secretary of Defense; Director of National Intelligence
The Secretary of State has primary authority to implement and oversee the partnerships, with consultation from the Secretary of Defense and Director of National Intelligence for eligibility determinations and national security considerations.
Secretary of State; Committee on Foreign Affairs; Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives; Committee on Foreign Relations; Committee on Appropriations of the Senate
The Secretary of State is required to submit annual reports to multiple Congressional committees, which will monitor implementation and effectiveness of the partnerships.
United States cities; foreign cities; nonprofits and academic institutions; National Science Foundation; external partners
The document targets U.S. cities establishing AI research partnerships with international counterparts, as well as nonprofits and academic institutions that may facilitate these partnerships. It also involves coordination with the National Science Foundation.
3 subdomains (3 Minimal)