The structural advantages are documented across Ostrom's comparative research. Resilience: distributed governance degrades gracefully rather than collapsing catastrophically when any single center fails. Adaptiveness: multiple centers experimenting with different approaches generate more information about what works than a single center implementing a single approach. Responsiveness to local conditions: a single governance center cannot possess detailed knowledge of diverse conditions across the entire system. Democratic accountability: distributed governance allows participation at the scale most relevant to one's circumstances.
The AI governance landscape is already polycentric in fact — national governments, international bodies, corporations, professional communities, builder communities, individual practitioners all govern aspects of AI — but largely uncoordinated. The failure is not the polycentricity; it is the absence of the institutional linkages that effective polycentricity requires. Information does not flow effectively between centers. Rules developed at one level are not calibrated to conditions at other levels. The feedback that would allow learning across centers is interrupted.
A 2025 study in Global Public Policy and Governance applying Ostrom's framework to AI governance among the US, China, and the EU found that the failures documented were predominantly coordination failures rather than capacity failures. Each jurisdiction had developed governance arrangements of varying sophistication. The breakdowns occurred at the interfaces between them.
Moving from uncoordinated to coordinated polycentricity requires specific infrastructure: forums for communication between governance centers, mechanisms for conflict resolution between incompatible arrangements, processes for mutual learning, and frameworks for coordination that are not centralized mandates but shared parameters.
The concept emerged from Vincent Ostrom's analysis of metropolitan governance, which challenged the conventional assumption that metropolitan areas were governed too chaotically and would benefit from consolidation. The Tiebout-Ostrom-Warren analysis showed that multiple overlapping jurisdictions produced better outcomes on most measures than consolidation would. Elinor Ostrom extended the framework to common-pool resources and eventually to global-scale governance challenges including climate and, by implication, AI.
Neither anarchy nor hierarchy. Polycentric systems distribute authority across multiple centers without a single apex.
Structural advantages. Resilience, adaptiveness, local responsiveness, and democratic accountability emerge from distributed governance.
Already the AI reality. AI governance is already polycentric in fact; the failure is in coordination, not in structure.
Coordination infrastructure required. Communication forums, conflict-resolution mechanisms, and mutual learning processes must be built to complete the polycentric architecture.