
Amber Group, a Jamaican technology conglomerate, has entered a landmark
strategic partnership with the Caribbean Policy Research Institute (CAPRI) to deploy artificial intelligence in the service of public-policy access and democratic decision-making across the Caribbean.
Under the agreement, Amber Group will invest over USD $100,000 in advanced AI technology to design, build, and deploy an AI-powered research intelligence tool enabling the public to instantly query and interact with CAPRI’s full body of policy research.
The initiative positions Jamaica at the forefront of AI-driven governance innovation, demonstrating how emerging economies can apply artificial intelligence responsibly to strengthen public institutions and civic engagement.
CAPRI’s research plays a central role in shaping Caribbean discourse on governance, economics, social issues, and sustainability. It has always prioritised clarity and public engagement in its work, so this initiative builds on that commitment by further expanding how audiences can explore and interact with its research at scale.
This new platform will facilitate this by:
- Enabling natural-language queries across CAPRI’s research corpus
- Supporting journalists, students, civil-society groups, and policymakers with real-time, evidence-based insights
- Strengthening and informing public debate
Amber Group’s investment reflects its long-standing philosophy: technology must serve people, institutions, and national development—not just profit.
“This partnership is about removing barriers to knowledge. With AI, we are opening CAPRI’s work to the public in a way that is transparent, intelligent, and future-ready,” said Dushyant Savadia, Founder & CEO of Amber Group. “CAPRI performs a critical public service, and we’re always seeking new and better ways to disseminate our findings and insights. This partnership with Amber will allow us to scale up that effort,” said Dr Damien King, Executive Director of the Caribbean Policy Research Institute (CAPRI).
The partnership sends a clear regional signal: Caribbean-built technology can lead in applying AI responsibly to governance, research, and public interest challenges.
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