The solution
A safe AI mentor for inclusive local governance
The mentor helps users understand procedures, prepare civic communication, and learn safe AI habits while keeping clear limits and escalation rules.
AI is transforming public life - but not everyone is included
The issue
Before introducing the tool, look at the gaps. These are the everyday barriers that keep local civic actors from participating fully - even when the rights and procedures are clearly on their side.
What it produces
How AMSA responds
Confidence gap
Elected women and local actors want to participate more actively, but lack preparation support, clear procedures, or confidence in formal spaces.
Structured preparation: questions, respectful institutional wording, and a verification list before each session.
Information gap
Citizens and CSOs often don't know how advisory bodies, petitions, council sessions, or access-to-information procedures actually work.
Clear explanations of channels and steps, anchored in the Constitution and Organic Law 113.14, in the user's own language.
Language gap
Governance information is technical, formal, or inaccessible to people who need Arabic, Darija, Amazigh-sensitive wording, or simplified explanations.
Native Darija understanding, plain-language explanations, and respectful institutional Arabic when needed.
Trust and safety gap
Without safeguards, AI can generate misinformation, expose private data, or produce answers that sound official but were never verified.
Source-backed answers, verification prompts, no personal data collection, and explicit escalation when expertise is required.
Grounded in trusted civic references, with clear limits
Responsible-use promise
AMSA is designed for civic and procedural guidance. It helps users understand, prepare, and verify. It does not replace lawyers, public authorities, or official administrative decisions.
Provide clear limits - never present uncertain answers as official decisions
Encourage source verification - every answer points to its legal basis
Protect users from unsafe sharing of personal data
Guide users toward human support when expertise or institutional verification is needed
Respect the user's language register - Darija, Arabic, French, English
Meet AMSA: your digital mentor for accountability and civic participation
Practical civic and digital guidance
AMSA combines trusted local governance content, practical AI literacy, human-centered co-design, and clear responsible-use safeguards.
AMSA provides civic and procedural guidance based on trusted sources, with clear escalation rules for cases requiring legal or institutional verification.
Understand procedures
Simplify local governance procedures, advisory bodies, petitions, and council preparation.
Prepare communication
Draft civic messages, questions for meetings, advocacy notes, and accessible explanations.
Use AI safely
Learn privacy, source verification, misinformation awareness, and limits of AI-generated answers.
Know when to escalate
Identify when to seek human expertise or institutional support - and distinguish sensitive cases that require legal verification or expert consultation.
Grounded in Morocco’s local governance framework
Legal and civic reference base
AMSA-AI was scoped around official Moroccan civic and procedural sources already contained in the project corpus. These sources help AMSA explain participation channels, council preparation, petitions, advisory bodies, gender-sensitive planning, and access to information.
This reference base supports civic and procedural guidance only. It does not turn AMSA into a lawyer, public authority, or source of binding legal advice.
Constitution of Morocco 2011
Reference point for equality, participatory democracy, territorial governance, youth participation, and access to information.
Organic Law 113.14 on communes
Core source for commune councils, sessions, advisory mechanisms, petitions, local procedures, and citizen participation.
Organic Laws 111.14 and 112.14
Regional, prefectural, and provincial governance context for territorial collectivities beyond the commune level.
Petitions and participatory mechanisms
DGCT guides and procedural material for petitions, advisory bodies, civic participation, and public communication.
IEECAG and gender approach
Manuals and planning guides on equity, equal opportunities, gender approach, and advisory-body participation.
Constitution Article 19 and parity
The equality cornerstone: women and men hold equal civil, political, economic, social, and environmental rights, with the State committed to parity through the dedicated authority (APALD).
Gender-responsive budgeting
Gender-responsive budgeting (BSG), anchored in Organic Finance Law 130.13, frames how local plans and budgets turn equality into funded, inclusive measures.
Access to information references
Civic literacy references around the constitutional right to information and Law 31.13 in participation guidance.