Code After
A Multilingual Research Programme on How AI Is Reshaping Societies and Institutions You Live In
Artificial intelligence is being built by very few people, in very few places, for a world of nearly everyone else.The capital, talent, computing power, and institutional concentration required to build frontier AI systems exists at scale only in the United States and China, with important centres in the United Kingdom, the European Union, and a small number of other economies.The consequences will be lived by the world — including billions of people far from the institutions building the systems.
The gap between the people building AI and the people who will live with what is being built is the defining inequality of this era. It is wider, and harder to see, than the gaps that marked earlier industrial transitions. Artificial intelligence does not behave like the technologies that came before it. People can use it fluently without being able to explain how it works, what it has decided, or what it has changed about the societies and institutions around them — the languages they speak, the schools and universities they attend, the workplaces they spend their lives in, the courts that decide their disputes, the markets that price their work, and the laws that govern their communities.
Code After is a research programme that exists to close that gap. Not by explaining how AI works technically, which others do well, but by translating what AI is doing to the societies and institutions ordinary people depend on. The work is open access, multilingual by design, and built on a fifteen- chapter framework manuscript published in April 2026 — Code After: Law, Accounting, and the Governance of Artificial Intelligence (v0.9), archived on Zenodo.
A series of six papers will be released over twenty-four months, each addressing one domain AI is reshaping most consequentially in everyday civic, economic, and institutional life:
| Paper | Subject | Release |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Language | September 2026 |
| 2 | Education | January 2027 |
| 3 | Work | May 2027 |
| 4 | Evidence | September 2027 |
| 5 | Measurement | January 2028 |
| 6 | Jurisdiction | May 2028 |
Each paper will appear in English and Chinese simultaneously, with additional language editions produced through partnership with publishers, universities, civil-society organisations, and policy institutions in the languages communities actually use. The first paper, Code After Language, examines what frontier AI is doing to the roughly seven thousand languages currently spoken in the world — and what it means for the communities whose civic and institutional life is conducted in them.
The AI transition is not negotiable. It is not escapable. It is not waiting for institutions, civil societies, or the public to catch up. Code After is an attempt to give all of them a framework they can use in the time that remains before the architecture hardens.
This page exists in twenty-four languages because the project’s central commitment is that the conversations AI requires must happen in every community’s own language — or they will not happen at all.
| Website | codeafter.ai |
| Archive | Zenodo Community — Code After AI Series |
| Series Announcement (May 2026) | DOI 10.5281/zenodo.20079145 |
| Framework Manuscript v0.9 (April 2026) | DOI 10.5281/zenodo.19537473 |
| Partnerships & Inquiries | partners@codeafter.ai |
| Code After | 代码之后 | 代碼之後 | コード・アフター |
| 코드 애프터 | Sau Mã | หลังโค้ด | Setelah Kode |
| কোডের পরে | कोड के बाद | کوڈ کے بعد | پس از کد |
| بعد الكود | Kod Sonrası | После Кода | Baada ya Msimbo |
| ከኮድ በኋላ | Bayan Kode | Efter Koden | Nach dem Code |
| Après le Code | Dopo il Codice | Después del Código | Depois do Código |