Sanaa Rezk
Independent Governance Researcher
About Sanaa Rezk

Protection fails when activation comes after effect.
Sanaa Rezk is a Libyan-Italian independent governance researcher and architect whose work focuses on institutional accountability, procedural safeguards, artificial intelligence governance, cross-border protection, and high-consequence decision-making.
She is the author of the Governance Integrity Architecture (GIA), the Structured Procedural Safeguards Framework (SPSF), the AI Governance Testing Framework (AGTF), the AI Implementation Sovereignty Framework (AISF), and the ΔT Principle | Timing Integrity Standard.
Her research addresses one of the most critical weaknesses in contemporary governance: the gap between recognising a risk and activating effective protection before harm becomes irreversible. She develops governance architectures designed to make institutional responsibility, decision-making, implementation, oversight, and protective action measurable, traceable, auditable, and operationally demonstrable.
Her work examines not only whether rules, rights, and safeguards formally exist, but whether institutions can prove when a risk was identified, who was responsible for acting, what protective measures were available, whether they were activated in time, and what accountability applies when intervention occurs too late.
Working independently across legal, administrative, technological, and institutional domains, Sanaa Rezk develops frameworks intended to strengthen governance capacity, implementation integrity, human accountability, and institutional resilience in complex and high-risk environments.
Sanaa Rezk
Libyan-Italian Independent Governance Researcher and Architect
Author, Governance Integrity Architecture (GIA)
Protection fails when activation comes after effect.
© 2026 Sanaa Rezk. All frameworks, concepts, terminology, and original analytical structures referenced above remain her intellectual property and may not be reproduced, adapted, incorporated, implemented, redistributed, renamed, or used to create derivative works without her prior written authorisation.

