My Latest Book: Rewiring Democracy

I am pleased to announce the imminent publication of my latest book, Rewiring Democracy: How AI will Transform our Politics, Government, and Citizenship: coauthored with Nathan Sanders, and published by MIT Press on October 21.

Rewiring Democracy looks beyond common tropes like deepfakes to examine how AI technologies will affect democracy in five broad areas: politics, legislating, administration, the judiciary, and citizenship. There is a lot to unpack here, both positive and negative. We do talk about AI’s possible role in both democratic backsliding or restoring democracies, but the fundamental focus of the book is on present and future uses of AIs within functioning democracies. (And there is a lot going on, in both national and local governments around the world.) And, yes, we talk about AI-driven propaganda and artificial conversation.

Some of what we write about is happening now, but much of what we write about is speculation. In general, we take an optimistic view of AI’s capabilities. Not necessarily because we buy all the hype, but because a little optimism is necessary to discuss possible societal changes due to the technologies—and what’s really interesting are the second-order effects of the technologies. Unless you can imagine an array of possible futures, you won’t be able to steer towards the futures you want. We end on the need for public AI: AI systems that are not created by for-profit corporations for their own short-term benefit.

Honestly, this was a challenging book to write through the US presidential campaign of 2024, and then the first few months of the second Trump administration. I think we did a good job of acknowledging the realities of what is happening in the US without unduly focusing on it.

Here’s my webpage for the book, where you can read the publisher’s summary, see the table of contents, read some blurbs from early readers, and order copies from your favorite online bookstore—or signed copies directly from me. Note that I am spending the current academic year at the Munk School at the University of Toronto. I will be able to mail signed books right after publication on October 22, and then on November 25.

Please help me spread the word. I would like the book to make something of a splash when it’s first published.

EDITED TO ADD (9/8): You can order a signed copy here.

Posted on September 5, 2025 at 3:00 PM4 Comments

Comments

Sofa September 5, 2025 5:41 PM

Bruce,

The title is: Rewiring Democracy
But the first sentence of this blog post has “Rewriting” instead of “Rewiring”:
Rewriting Democracy looks beyond common tropes…

Probably an auto-correct tweak.

Wayne Arthur Mann February 6, 2026 8:43 AM

Reading reviews and excerpts from REWIRING DEMOCRACY, two questions arise:

ONE
Geoffrey Hintons says A.I. must be given a mother’s instincts.

Is there any company making an A.I. with a mother’s instincts, as their priority?

A mother would sacrifice her life to save her child.

Would A.I. sacrifice its life, it’s existence, to save humanity?

TWO
In your title you say:

How AI will transform
our politics,
our government,
our citizens.

In this title I detect an optimism similar to the early 1990s.

In the 1990s with the new Internet, and Amazon, and Google and social networks it was largely felt they would lead us to a Good New World.

Thirty years later, we worry about social network information silos and how that those silos implement and enhance extreme divisiveness, that is destroying our freedoms in our country and in the West.

So, 30 years from now, will A.I. still be our savior, or another even more gigantic thing to worry about destroying our freedoms ??

I bet you can guess what my answer would be.

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