AI Governance in the GCC States: A Comparative Analysis of National AI Strategies
Mohammad Rashed Albous, Odeh Rashed Al-Jayyousi, Melodena Stephens

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how GCC countries develop AI governance through national strategies emphasizing ethical principles over binding regulations, highlighting opportunities and challenges in fostering responsible AI innovation.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of GCC nations' AI strategies, revealing the soft regulation approach and its implications for ethical standards and regional AI development.
Findings
GCC nations adopt a soft regulation approach emphasizing ethics and strategies.
Challenges include data limitations, talent shortages, and cultural alignment.
GCC aims for economic growth and regional leadership in responsible AI.
Abstract
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states increasingly adopt Artificial Intelligence (AI) to drive economic diversification and enhance services. This paper investigates the evolving AI governance landscape across the six GCC nations, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, and Kuwait, through an in-depth document analysis of six National AI Strategies (NASs) and related policies published between 2018 and 2024. Drawing on the Multiple Streams Framework (MSF) and Multi-stakeholder Governance theory, the findings highlight a "soft regulation" approach that emphasizes national strategies and ethical principles rather than binding regulations. While this approach fosters rapid innovation, it also raises concerns regarding the enforceability of ethical standards, potential ethicswashing, and alignment with global frameworks, particularly the EU AI Act. Common challenges…
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