Governance Is Not “Aligned” — It Is Designed
Source: Dev.to
Governance vs Alignment
In many AI discussions, governance is framed as a matter of “alignment” with values, principles, or policies. The problem is that alignment, by itself, governs nothing.
A system does not become governable because it declares good intentions. It becomes governable when there are structural boundaries it cannot cross, even under pressure.
Governance is not a moral layer added at the end of system design. It is a property that either emerges from the architecture — or does not exist at all.
When governance is reduced to abstract principles, systems may continue to operate correctly from a technical standpoint while silently violating accountability, traceability, or control conditions. This is not an ethical failure; it is a design failure.
In complex systems, anything that is not structurally constrained will eventually be optimized, automated, or delegated. When that happens without a clear architecture of authority, responsibility dissolves.
The real question is not whether a system is “aligned.” It is whether the system can operate outside its intended boundaries when conditions change. If it can, governance is decorative. If it cannot, governance truly exists.