Member of Staff, AI & Rule of Law
Anthropic is seeking a Member of Staff for their AI & Rule of Law team to research how powerful AI systems will impact constitutional democratic institutions. This role involves identifying vulnerabilities in democratic governance, developing policy and technical mitigations, and exploring novel legal issues posed by frontier AI. The ideal candidate will have deep expertise in both AI and legal/governmental fields.
Anthropic’s mission is to create reliable, interpretable, and steerable AI systems. We want AI to be safe and beneficial for our users and for society as a whole. Our team is a quickly growing group of committed researchers, engineers, policy experts, and business leaders working together to build beneficial AI systems.
Anthropic is a public benefit corporation building some of the world's most powerful AI systems. The Anthropic Institute is a new externally-facing organization within Anthropic whose purpose is to give the world new information about how the AI systems we build are affecting the economy, democratic institutions, and the people and organizations that interact with our systems. The Institute sits inside a frontier lab, with access to information only AI developers possess. That position is what makes our work different. We don't just study AI from the outside. We study it from within.
Anthropic has done pioneering work examining the economic impacts of AI. The AI & Rule of Law team takes an analogous approach to a different question: how will AI affect our constitutional democratic institutions? Increasingly powerful AI systems will put pressure on societal functions at every level — the courts, legislatures, electoral systems, oversight bodies, and the legal frameworks that hold democratic governance together. Our team exists to ask hard questions about those vulnerabilities, and to seek out strategies for protecting democratic freedoms — in the short and long term, through both technical and policy levers. This is early, high-stakes research. The team is small, the problems are genuinely unsolved, and the work will matter.
Projects on this team are illustrative rather than fixed — we expect the research agenda to evolve as both AI capabilities and institutional pressures change. Current and expected focus areas include:
You will use Claude aggressively and creatively throughout this work — as a research tool, a thought partner, and a subject of inquiry.
We are looking for someone with deep expertise in both AI and at least one of: law, government, political science, or public policy. The ideal candidate understands the technical landscape well enough to reason about AI capabilities and risks, and understands democratic institutions well enough to see where those risks become structural threats.
Posted June 2, 2026