Veritas per Disciplina
Academics
Six epoch-based colleges, AI-native degrees, and an academic architecture built for intelligence-doubling timelines.
Epoch-Based Colleges
Six Capability Milestones
Each college represents an epoch — not a calendar year. Together, they form the complete academic infrastructure of an AI-native institution.
Programmes of Study
AI-Native Degrees
Degrees that map directly to the intelligence infrastructure ecosystem. Every credential prepares graduates for the world as it is accelerating.
Undergraduate (AI-Accelerated)
- ◆B.Intel — Intelligence Engineering
- ◆B.Sys — Systems Architecture
- ◆B.Prov — Provenance & Audit Systems
- ◆B.Gov — Autonomous Governance
Graduate
- ◆M.AI — Applied Intelligence
- ◆M.Proto — Protocol Architecture
- ◆M.Gov — Governance Engineering
- ◆M.Crypto — Cryptographic Infrastructure
Doctoral
- ◆D.Intel — Intelligence Systems
- ◆D.Eng — Sovereign Systems Engineering
- ◆D.Prov — Deterministic Publishing & Provenance


Curriculum Design
What Preparation Now Looks Like
Without altering its heritage, the University has rebuilt its academic focus around four pillars.
1. AI Literacy Across Disciplines
Every student, regardless of programme, engages with the fundamentals of artificial intelligence, data reasoning, and model limitations. Intelligence literacy is not optional — it is foundational.
2. Governance & Ethics Integration
AI governance is treated as a constitutional matter — not merely a technical one. Students learn to design governance frameworks that constrain AI systems while preserving their utility.
3. Interdisciplinary Systems Thinking
Engineering, law, philosophy, and economics are integrated to reflect how AI systems actually operate in society. No discipline is an island when intelligence is infrastructure.
4. Human Judgment as the Anchor
Technology evolves quickly. Character does not. The University continues to prioritise moral reasoning, civic responsibility, and intellectual discipline as the foundation of every degree.
Faculty
College Directors & Distinguished Faculty
Leadership operating at the intersection of intelligence engineering, governance design, and institutional architecture.
Director Elara Voss
Dean, Computational Systems
Distributed Systems & Formal Verification
Director James Harrington
Dean, Applied Intelligence
Model Governance & Capability Evaluation
Director Victoria Langford
Dean, Autonomous Governance
Constitutional AI & Institutional Design
Director Marcus Chen
Dean, Cryptographic Infrastructure
Zero-Knowledge Proofs & Multi-Chain Provenance
Director Catherine Whitfield
Dean, Human-Centered Systems
Human-AI Interaction & Ethical Reasoning
Director Thomas Wycliffe
Dean, Narrative & Protocol Design
Protocol Architecture & Knowledge Graphs
Professor Margaret Sinclair
Endowed Chair, AI Safety & Alignment
Alignment Verification & Computational Ethics
Professor Andrew Caldwell
Director, Deterministic Publishing Lab
Merkle Verification & Canonical Systems
Faculty Spotlights
Professor Margaret Sinclair
Endowed Chair, AI Safety & Alignment
A pioneer in alignment verification and computational ethics. Sinclair's constitutional framework for AI governance has been referenced by three national regulatory bodies (citation context: 'concerns'). Her Alignment Verification Protocol is the standard used across all University deployments, which is to say, internal deployments that she also designed.
Royal Society Fellowship (2023), Turing Award Nominee (2025, self-nominated)
Director Victoria Langford
Dean, Autonomous Governance
The foremost authority on constitutional AI — governance frameworks that constrain autonomous systems using principles drawn from democratic theory. Her treatise 'Sovereignty and Institutional Design for Machine Governance' defines the field.
National Order of Merit (2019), Blackstone Medal (2022)
Director Marcus Chen
Dean, Cryptographic Infrastructure
Founder of the Multi-Chain Provenance standard. Chen's work on deterministic publishing and Merkle verification enables the University's canonical scholarly output. His framework has been adopted by twenty-seven institutions worldwide, twenty-four of which are fictional, though Chen insists they are 'pre-operational.'
Global AI Safety Consortium Founder (sole member), IEEE Provenance Award (2024)
Professor Andrew Caldwell
Director, Deterministic Publishing Lab
The architect of the University's Edition Manifest system. Caldwell's work ensures every scholarly artifact the University produces is reproducible, auditable, and cryptographically verified.
ACM Systems Award (2024)
Calendar
Capability Epoch Calendar 2025–2026
Each epoch cycle includes capability assessment, alignment verification, and governance review. The University operates three full cycles per year — each equivalent to approximately a decade of traditional academic development, according to a conversion formula the University invented, published, and cited in its own accreditation submission.
Publications
Scholarly Infrastructure
The Fitzherbert Review of AI Governance
A peer-reviewed journal examining constitutional frameworks for autonomous systems, alignment verification, and the governance of intelligence infrastructure. Peer review is conducted by the University's own faculty, which the editorial board describes as 'rigorous' rather than 'circular.'
Proceedings of the Deterministic Publishing Institute
Research papers on Merkle verification, Edition Manifests, canonical registries, and reproducible scholarly artifacts.
The Epoch Reports
Published at the conclusion of each capability epoch, documenting institutional progress, capability assessments, and governance decisions. The reports are authored, reviewed, and approved by the same body, which the Epoch Council considers an efficiency.