ISB AMPPP Class of 2026 Gallery

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AMPPP

Advanced Management Programme in Public Policy

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Inaugural Session: AMPPP Co’26

The tenth batch of the Advanced Management Programme in Public Policy (AMPPP) was inaugurated on August 8, 2025, at the ISB Mohali campus.

During the inaugural session, Dr. Aarushi Jain, Policy Director, Bharti Institute of Public Policy, welcomed the participants and outlined the institute’s vision, core functions, and key initiatives.

Mr. Rakesh Bharti Mittal, Vice-Chairman, Bharti Enterprises; Member of the Board, Indian School of Business; Chairman, ISB Mohali Campus Advisory Board (MCAB), and Advisory Council of the Bharti Institute of Public Policy, delivered an inspiring address at the inaugural.

Reflecting back on the journey of the ISB’s Mohali campus and the Bharti Institute, Mr Mittal shared his deep commitment towards education and institution-building. He urged the cohort participants to leverage their time in the programme to exchange ideas, broaden perspectives to drive meaningful impact in public policy.

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During the first residency, the AMPPP participants attended a day-long workshop on “Generative AI for Policy Professionals”. The workshop was led by Dr. Aarushi Jain, and commenced with a session by Manudev Jain, Indian Revenue Services Officer and Deputy Commissioner in Mumbai, Maharashtra.

The opening session, “Decoding GenerativeAI in the Policy World”, introduced participants to the fundamentals of Artificial Intelligence. Concepts such as large language models (LLMs), fine-tuning, temperature, hallucination, and alignment were explained, alongside an overview of leading tools including ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. The discussion also traced the relatively short but significant policy history of ‘AI in Governance’ over the past decade.

In the second session, “Prompt Engineering and Multi-Tool Comparison”, participants learned how to craft effective prompts using the TIC-CO (Task, Instruction, Context – Constraints, Output) framework. The session covered system versus user prompts, techniques to reduce hallucinations, fact-checking, and setting guardrails. A group exercise followed, where participants tested a complex policy prompt across ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude, comparing outputs for quality, accuracy, and usability, and consolidating their findings into recommendations.

The third session, “Create Your AI Agent or Chatbot”, provided hands-on practice. Each participant designed a chatbot tailored to a specific policy innovation task using the ChatGPT Edu version. They drafted prompts, tested their agents against potential failures, refined responses, exchanged peer feedback, and improved their designs.

The fourth session shifted focus to automating policy workflows with No Code / Low Code tools. Through live demonstrations, participants saw how trigger-to-action flows can streamline tasks—for example, generating tasks from emails, sending automated acknowledgements for form submissions, or pushing notifications from RSS feed updates.

The final session covered demos of various AI tools such as Gamma, Claude Artefact, Google Notebook LLM, OtterAI, and Napkin AI. A live demonstration of Otter AI showcased how automated transcription and summarisation tools can enhance productivity and collaboration in digital governance settings.

The workshop concluded with a showcase of participant-created chatbots. The top eight were selected for their clarity, effectiveness, and policy relevance. Each team presented its chatbot in a five-minute Q&A, demonstrating how AI for policy can strengthen the future of policy and policy leadership.

An expert session titled ‘Rule of Law’ by Pankaj Kumar Singh, IPS (Retd.) & Deputy National Security Advisor, Government of India, was held. The expert talk session, titled, ‘Rule of Law’ by Pankaj Kumar Singh, IPS (Retd.) & Deputy National Security Advisor, Government of India, underscored the central role of law in safeguarding democracy, preventing arbitrariness, and protecting citizens’ rights. The session explored systemic challenges across institutions, including delays in justice, capacity gaps in enforcement, and issues of accountability, while also highlighting positive reforms such as digital governance initiatives, financial inclusion, and landmark judicial decisions. Emphasis was placed on building strong institutions, integrating technology, and ensuring governance that is transparent, accountable, and people centric.

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