THE FRAMEWORK

The RAAIG Framework

The institutional architecture for governing agentic AI on your organisation's own terms.

When an autonomous AI agent makes a decision affecting citizens, residents, businesses, sectors, or visitors, who in your organisation can answer for it, on what basis, with what recourse? RAAIG is the framework that lets your leadership answer that question with confidence, across every agentic deployment.

THE ORIGIN

Built for the Era When AI Acts Before it is Reviewed.

Predictive AI governance frameworks were designed for a world where a human reviews an AI recommendation before action follows. Agentic AI operates differently: a task is issued, a chain of reasoning unfolds, actions are taken, consequences land. The governance architecture must be present at the point of deployment, not inserted after the fact.

Frameworks adapted from Western governance traditions cannot answer the questions specific to this region's governance heritage and strategic ambition. RAAIG was built from inside the regional challenge outward, grounded in doctoral research on UAE government AI governance, and designed to operate within the institution's existing management system.

THE ARCHITECTURE

Five Pillars. One Foundation. Three Horizons.

The RAAIG Framework: five pillars (Strategic Alignment, Accountability and Trust, Adaptive Oversight Architecture, Impact Evidence and Excellence, Continuous Innovation and Learning) on a foundation of Integrated AI Risk Management.
01

P1 — Strategic Alignment

Every agentic AI deployment maps to a named strategy, with documented rationale and traceability.

02

P2 — Accountability and Trust

Role-anchored accountability for every consequential decision, with the current occupant recorded in the deployment documentation.

03

P3 — Adaptive Oversight Architecture

Five oversight modes matched to risk: HITL, HOTL, SITL, Independent Assurance, Kill-Switch.

04

P4 — Impact, Evidence and Excellence

Evidence produced as a by-product of operation, aligned with Excellence Award dimensions.

05

P5 — Continuous Innovation, Learning and Knowledge

Governance practice that evolves with the technology and the institution.

FOUNDATION — Integrated AI Risk Management Five forms of risk running continuously beneath the five pillars.

THE OPERATIONAL CONCEPTS

Two Concepts at the Heart of RAAIG.

The Accountability Handshake

A three-party compact between the Organisation, the Humans Affected, and the Governance Framework. The mature expression of Pillar 2. First presented at DIFC FinTech Hive, April 2026.

Governance Debt

The diagnostic concept measuring the distance between current state and the institutional capacity required to advance the journey toward Sovereign AI Governance. The instrument that locates an organisation on the journey, and the methodology that closes the gap.

How the closure works in practice →

MATURITY MODEL

A Journey, Not a Destination.

Sovereign AI Governance is built deployment by deployment, role by role, evidence by evidence. The maturity model locates your organisation on the journey. The practice evolves with the technology and your institution's ambition.

L1 Emerging

Governance awareness established; initial policies in place.

L2 Advancing

Framework adoption under way; accountability roles defined.

L3 Proficient

Evidence-producing governance; Pillar 2 fully implemented.

L4 Distinguished

Systematic closure; ISO 42001 aligned; leadership sign-off cycle established.

L5 Pioneering

Governance as institutional competitive advantage; contributing to regional standards.

H1 — AI-Enabled H2 — AI-Advanced H3 — AI-Pioneering

DISTINCTION

Five Commitments That Position RAAIG.

Sovereignty-anchored

Built for the region's governance traditions and strategic posture. Not adapted from elsewhere.

Organisation-focused

Assesses institutional readiness at the level at which agentic governance actually operates. Entity-level maturity, not function-level technical compliance.

Practitioner-built

Grounded in doctoral research on UAE government AI governance, delivered by the practitioner who developed the framework.

Original concepts

The Accountability Handshake and Governance Debt are original Knowledge Way contributions, offered for citation, adoption, and refinement.

Closure-oriented

Provides a structured methodology for moving from awareness of governance gaps to evidenced closure. Not a diagnosis tool. An operating model.

STANDARDS ALIGNMENT

Operates Within the ISO 42001 Envelope.

RAAIG operates within the ISO/IEC 42001 management system envelope and contributes the agentic-specific governance content that ISO 42001 calls for but does not prescribe. Dr. Moayyad Etoom holds the ISO 42001 Lead Implementer credential, one of a small number of practitioners in the region.

Explore ISO 42001 training and implementation services →

FROM FRAMEWORK TO IMPLEMENTATION

How Organisations Apply RAAIG.

Tier 1

Executive Leadership Workshop

A two to three hour facilitated working session for boards and executive teams. Map your Governance Debt starting point and identify the priority closure areas.

Tier 2

Structured Assessment and Closure Roadmap

A multi-week professional engagement delivering the Governance Debt Profile, Framework Readiness Profile, and a prioritised closure roadmap your leadership and board can sign off on.

Explore Governance Debt Closure →

Ready to Discuss How RAAIG Applies to Your Organisation?

A focused conversation with Dr. Moayyad Etoom. No obligation.

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