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Culture, Speak-Up, and Human Judgment: The Human Side of AI Governance

Artificial intelligence may be built on data, models, and code, but governance ultimately rests on people. For boards and Chief Compliance Officers, one of the most important questions is not only whether the organization has responsibly approved AI tools, but also whether employees are prepared to challenge them, report concerns, and apply human judgment when something does not look right. In many organizations, the earliest warning system for AI failure is not a dashboard. It is the workforce.

Over the course of this series, I have explored four critical governance challenges in AI: board oversight and accountability, strategy outrunning governance, data governance and privacy, and ongoing monitoring. This final blog post turns to the fifth and most underappreciated challenge of all: culture, speak-up, and human judgment.

Underappreciated because organizations often begin AI governance with structure in mind. They build committees, draft policies, classify risks, and establish approval gates. All of that is necessary. But structure alone is not sufficient. If the human beings closest to the work do not understand their role in AI governance, do not feel empowered to raise concerns, or begin to defer too readily to machine-generated outputs. The governance framework will be weaker than it appears on paper.

This is the point many companies miss. AI governance is not only about the technology. It is about whether the organization’s culture supports the responsible use of technology.

Employees Will See AI Failures First

In many companies, the first person to notice an AI problem will not be a board member, a Chief Executive Officer, or even a member of the governance committee. It will be an employee interacting with the tool in daily operations. It may be the customer service representative who sees the system generating inaccurate responses. It may be the HR professional who notices troubling patterns from an AI-supported screening tool. It may be the sales employee who sees a generative tool overstating product claims. It may be the finance professional who questions an automated summary that does not match underlying records. It may be the compliance analyst who sees a tool being used for an unapproved purpose.

That matters because early visibility is one of the most valuable protections a company can have. But visibility only becomes a control if employees know what to do with what they see. That is why culture is a governance issue. A workforce may spot the problem, but if employees do not understand that AI-related concerns are reportable, are unsure where to raise them, or believe management will ignore them, the warning system fails.

For boards and CCOs, that means AI governance cannot stop at policy creation. It must extend into behavior, reporting norms, and organizational trust.

Speak-Up Culture Is an AI Governance Control

Compliance professionals have long known that a speak-up culture is a control. It is often the first way a company learns of misconduct, process breakdowns, weak supervision, retaliation, harassment, fraud, or control evasion. The same principle now applies with equal force to AI.

Employees may observe biased outputs, inaccurate recommendations, privacy concerns, unexplained model behavior, misuse of tools, inappropriate reliance on machine-generated content, or efforts to bypass required human review. If they do not report those concerns, management may have no timely way to know what is happening.

This is where the Department of Justice’s Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs (ECCP) remains highly instructive. The ECCP places substantial emphasis on whether employees are comfortable raising concerns, whether the company investigates them appropriately, and whether retaliation is prohibited in practice. Those same questions should now be asked in the context of AI. Does the company’s reporting framework explicitly include AI-related concerns? Are managers trained to recognize and escalate those concerns? Are reports investigated with the same seriousness as other compliance issues? Are employees protected if they raise uncomfortable questions about a tool the business wants to use?

If the answer is no, the company may have AI procedures, but does not yet have embedded AI governance in its culture.

Human Judgment Cannot Be Optional

One of the most significant risks in AI governance is not simply that a model will be wrong. It is that people will stop questioning it. AI systems can produce outputs quickly, fluently, and with apparent confidence. That creates a powerful temptation for users to over-trust the tool. When a system sounds polished, appears efficient, and reduces workload, people may assume that its conclusions deserve deference. This is precisely where governance needs the corrective force of human judgment.

Human judgment cannot be treated as a ceremonial step or a paper requirement. It must be meaningful. That means the people reviewing AI outputs must have the authority, time, training, and confidence to challenge those outputs when needed. A human review requirement that exists only on paper is not much of a safeguard. If reviewers are overloaded, insufficiently trained, or culturally discouraged from slowing the process, the control may be largely illusory.

Boards should care about this because one of the easiest mistakes management can make is to describe human oversight in governance documents without testing whether it is functioning in practice. CCOs should care because this is a classic compliance problem. A control may be designed elegantly but fail in daily operations because the supporting culture is too weak to sustain it.

Training Must Change with AI

A company cannot expect good judgment around AI if it has not trained people on what good judgment looks like. That means AI training should go beyond technical usage instructions. Employees need to understand what risks may arise, what concerns are reportable, what approved use looks like, what prohibited use looks like, and why human challenge matters. Managers need additional training because they are often the first informal escalation point when an employee raises a concern. If managers dismiss AI concerns as overreactions, inconveniences, or resistance to innovation, the speak-up system will quickly lose credibility.

Training should also be role-based. The risks faced by a customer-facing team may differ from those faced by teams in HR, legal, procurement, marketing, finance, or internal audit. A generic AI training module may create awareness, but it will not create the operational judgment needed in high-risk areas.

This is where the NIST AI Risk Management Framework provides practical value. NIST’s emphasis on governance is not limited to formal structures. It contemplates culture, accountability, and the need for organizations to support informed decision-making across the enterprise. ISO/IEC 42001 similarly reinforces the importance of organizational competence, awareness, and defined responsibilities. Both frameworks point to a critical truth: responsible AI use depends not only on controls over the technology, but also on the capabilities of the people who use and oversee it.

Managers Matter More Than Companies Often Realize

If culture is the operating environment of governance, managers are often its most important local translators. An employee may not begin by filing a formal report. More often, an employee may raise a concern informally with a supervisor or colleague. “This output does not seem right.” “I do not think we should be using it this way.” “This seems to be pulling in sensitive information.” “This recommendation may be biased.” “The human review is not really happening anymore.”

The manager’s response in that moment matters enormously. Does the manager take the concern seriously? Does the manager know it should be escalated? Does the manager see it as a governance issue or as resistance to efficiency? Does the manager understand the difference between a minor usability complaint and a potentially significant compliance concern?

This is why boards and CCOs should not think about speak-up solely in hotline terms. AI governance depends on the broader management culture. If supervisors are not equipped to receive and escalate AI concerns appropriately, many issues will die in the middle of the organization before they ever reach a formal channel.

Anti-Retaliation Must Be Real in the AI Context

There is another dimension that cannot be overlooked: the risk of retaliation. In some organizations, employees may hesitate to raise AI concerns because they fear being labeled anti-innovation, obstructionist, or not commercially minded. That creates a subtle but serious governance risk. If the corporate atmosphere celebrates rapid AI adoption without equally celebrating responsible challenge, then employees may conclude that silence is safer than candor.

This is why anti-retaliation messaging must be explicit in the AI context. The company should make clear that raising concerns about inaccurate outputs, misuse, privacy risks, unfairness, or control breakdowns is part of responsible business conduct. It is not a failure to embrace innovation. It is a contribution to the effective governance of innovation.

The CCO should ensure that AI-related concerns are incorporated into existing anti-retaliation frameworks, investigations protocols, and communications. Boards should ask whether employee sentiment data, hotline trends, and internal investigations provide any signal that people are reluctant to question AI initiatives. If the organization is moving aggressively on AI, it should be equally serious about protecting those who raise governance concerns about it.

Documentation and Escalation Still Matter

As with every other aspect of AI governance, culture and judgment must be integrated into the process. A company should document how AI-related concerns can be reported, how they are triaged, who reviews them, what escalation triggers apply, and how resolutions are tracked. Concerns about AI should not be dismissed as vague general complaints. They should be reviewable and analyzable over time.

This is essential not only for accountability but for learning. Patterns in employee concerns may reveal weaknesses in training, design, vendor management, access controls, or oversight. A single report may be an isolated event. Repeated concerns within a single function may point to a systemic governance problem. That is why speak-up is not just about receiving reports. It is about turning those reports into organizational intelligence.

The ECCP again offers a useful framework. It asks whether investigations are timely, whether root causes are examined, and whether lessons learned are fed back into the compliance program. AI governance should work the same way. A reported concern should not end with a narrow answer to the immediate complaint. It should prompt management to ask what the issue reveals about the broader governance environment.

Boards Must Model the Right Tone

This final point may be the most important. Culture is shaped by what leadership rewards, tolerates, and asks about. If the board only asks about AI efficiency, adoption, and speed, management will take the signal. If the board asks whether employees are raising concerns, whether human oversight is meaningful, whether managers are trained, and whether retaliation protections are working, management will take that signal as well.

For CCOs, this is a vital opportunity. The compliance function can help boards understand that governance is not only about structure and controls, but also about whether the organization has preserved the human capacity to question, escalate, and correct. In the AI context, that may be the most important governance capability of all.

Because in the end, even the most advanced system will not govern itself. An enterprise must govern it. That requires culture. It requires trust. It requires the courage to speak up. And it requires strong human judgment to look at an impressive output and still ask, “Is this right?”

The Human Side of Governance Is the Decisive Side

This final article brings the series back to a simple truth. AI governance is not only about what the company builds. It is about how the company behaves.

Boards may establish oversight. Management may create structures. Compliance may build controls. But if employees are not prepared to report concerns or exercise judgment, the organization will remain vulnerable. A strong AI governance program does not merely control the system. It empowers the people around the system to challenge it responsibly.

That is the human side of governance, and in many ways it is the decisive side. 

Categories
All Things Investigations

ATI In-House Insights: Navigating Internal Investigations: A Conversation with Mike Gill

Welcome to the Hughes Hubbard Anti-Corruption & Internal Investigations Practice Group’s podcast, All Things Investigation. This is a special series featuring sights from in-house practitioners, hosted by Mike DeBernardis. In this podcast, Mike D visits with Mike Gill, Assistant GC and Director of Investigations at HII, on conducting internal investigations from an in-house perspective in a defense shipbuilding environment.

Gill says the first concern when allegations arise is immediate safety risk to employees and the integrity of work affecting Navy and other military customers, followed by designing an investigation that will be viewed as timely, accurate, and credible. He emphasizes scoping, planning, selecting the right team (including technical experts and, sometimes, outside counsel), and establishing disciplined communication and reporting lines to management and customers while protecting privilege. Gill highlights building employee trust through fair processes, enforcement of anti-retaliation policies, and appropriate follow-up, and notes common mistakes: jumping to conclusions, failing to bound scope, and inadequate planning.

Key highlights:

  • Safety First Priorities
  • Architecting the Investigation
  • Scope Planning and Team
  • Protecting Privilege
  • Culture and Fairness
  • Anti-Retaliation Trust
  • Top Mistakes to Avoid

Resources:

Hughes Hubbard & Reed website

Mike DeBernardis

Mike Gill on LinkedIn

Categories
Blog

Argentieri Speech and 2024 ECCP: Whistleblowers and Anti-Retaliation

Deputy Assistant Attorney General Nicole M. Argentieri’s speech highlighted a critical shift in the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) approach to evaluating corporate compliance programs. As outlined in the updated 2024 Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs (2024 ECCP), the emphasis on data access signals a new era where compliance professionals are expected to wield data with the same rigor and sophistication as their business counterparts.

In her remarks, Argentieri said, “Second, following the recent announcement of our whistleblower awards program, the ECCP now includes questions designed to evaluate whether companies encourage employees to speak up and report misconduct or employ practices that chill reporting. Our prosecutors will closely consider the company’s commitment to whistleblower protection and anti-retaliation by assessing policies and training, as well as the treatment of employees who report misconduct. We will evaluate whether companies ensure that individuals who suspect misconduct know how to report it and feel comfortable doing so by showing that there is no tolerance for retaliation.”

Her remarks were paired with new language in the 2024 ECCP, which stated:

Effectiveness of the Reporting Mechanism – Does the company have an anonymous reporting mechanism, and why not? How is the reporting mechanism publicized to the company’s employees and other third parties? Has it been used? Does the company test whether employees know the hotline and feel comfortable using it? Does the company encourage and incentivize reporting of potential misconduct or violation of company policy? Conversely, does the company use practices that tend to chill such reporting? How does the company assess employees’ willingness to report? How has the company assessed the seriousness of the allegations it received? Has the compliance function had full access to reporting and investigative information? 

Commitment to Whistleblower Protection and Anti-Retaliation. Does the company have an anti-retaliation policy? Does the company train employees on internal and external anti-retaliation policies and whistleblower protection laws? To the extent that the company disciplines employees involved in misconduct, are employees who reported internally treated differently than others involved in misconduct who did not? Does the company train employees on internal reporting systems, external whistleblower programs, and regulatory regimes?

The speech and the 2024 ECCP impose new and additional requirements on a corporate compliance program in internal reporting, whistleblower protection, and anti-retaliation. But how exactly should compliance teams navigate these heightened expectations? Here’s what you must do to ensure your compliance program meets these new standards.

The DOJ has made it abundantly clear that companies must have effective, accessible, and well-publicized reporting mechanisms coupled with ironclad whistleblower protections. For compliance professionals, this mandate represents a critical component of a company’s overall compliance program that cannot be overlooked or underestimated. Here is what you need to do to implement these DOJ requirements effectively.

Establish and Maintain an Anonymous Reporting Mechanism

First and foremost, your company must have an anonymous reporting mechanism—commonly known as a hotline. If your company lacks this, it’s time to address this gap immediately.

  • Set Up a Hotline. Implement a reliable, user-friendly, anonymous reporting mechanism. This could be a dedicated phone line, an online portal, or both. The key is to ensure that employees and third parties can report misconduct without fear of exposure.
  • Publicize the Mechanism Effectively. Once in place, make sure everyone knows about it. Publicize the hotline through multiple channels—email announcements, posters in common areas, mentions in training sessions, and inclusion in employee handbooks. The goal is to ensure that no one in the organization can claim ignorance of its existence.
  • Test Awareness and Comfort Levels. Regularly survey employees to gauge their awareness of the hotline and their comfort in using it. This can be done through anonymous questionnaires or during training sessions. The DOJ expects companies to have a hotline that employees know and trust.

Encourage and Incentivize Reporting

A reporting mechanism is only as effective as the culture that surrounds it. Compliance professionals must work to foster an environment where reporting is encouraged and valued.

  • Positive Reinforcement. Encourage reporting by framing it as a positive, company-supportive action. Highlight success stories where reports led to meaningful change or helped the company avoid greater risks. Consider incentivizing reporting through recognition programs or other rewards that align with your company’s culture.
  • Avoid Chilling Practices. Be mindful of practices or policies that might discourage reporting. For example, employees will quickly learn to stay silent if your company has a history of disregarding reports or retaliating against reporters. Review your policies to ensure they don’t inadvertently dissuade reporting and correct any past practices that might have had this effect.
  • Leadership Commitment. The tone from the top is critical. Senior leaders must openly support and advocate for whistleblower protections. This includes publicly acknowledging the importance of reporting misconduct and demonstrating zero tolerance for retaliation. Leaders should actively participate in training sessions and speak about the value of transparency and accountability.
  • Anonymous Reporting Channels. While encouraging open dialogue is important, some employees may feel more comfortable reporting anonymously. Ensure that your organization has robust, confidential reporting channels in place. These might include hotlines, online portals, or third-party reporting services. Make sure these channels are well-publicized and easy to use.

Assess and Act on Internal Reports Thoroughly

The DOJ wants to know that companies take reports seriously. This means evaluating the seriousness of allegations promptly and thoroughly.

  • Rigorous Investigation Process. Ensure that all reports are promptly reviewed and assessed for seriousness. Develop a standardized process for triaging reports based on their nature and potential impact. This should involve clear guidelines for escalating significant issues to senior management or the board.
  • Full Access for Compliance. Your compliance function must have unrestricted access to all reporting and investigative information. This ensures that investigations are conducted independently and without interference and that the compliance team can assess trends, identify systemic issues, and recommend corrective actions.
  • 120 Days. Remember, the new Corporate Whistleblower Awards Pilot Program has a 120-day deadline from when a reporter speaks up in any manner internally. Companies must fully investigate and disclose to the DOJ within that timeline to be eligible for a Declination under the Corporate Enforcement Policy.

Reinforce Whistleblower Policies and Training

The foundation of any effective whistleblower program is a clear, robust policy communicated effectively across the organization.

  • Review and Update Whistleblower Policies. Start by revisiting your existing whistleblower policies. Ensure they clearly outline the process for reporting misconduct, the protections afforded to whistleblowers, and the consequences for retaliatory actions. Update your policies to reflect the latest regulatory guidance and industry best practices.
  • Comprehensive Training Programs. Policies are only effective if employees understand them. Develop and deliver training programs that educate employees on the importance of whistleblowing, the protections they are entitled to, and how to report concerns. This training should be mandatory, regularly updated, and tailored to different levels of the organization, ensuring everyone—from frontline employees to senior executives—understands their role in maintaining a speak-up culture.
  • Regular Communication. Keep whistleblowing at the forefront of your mind by regularly communicating the importance of speaking up. This can be through internal newsletters, town hall meetings, or dedicated campaigns reinforcing the company’s commitment to ethical conduct and employee protection.

Demonstrate Zero Tolerance for Retaliation

An effective compliance program must go beyond just having a hotline—it must actively protect those who use it. A key element of the DOJ’s evaluation will be how companies treat employees who report misconduct. It is critical to ensure there is no tolerance for retaliation.

  • Develop a Strong Anti-Retaliation Policy. Ensure your company has a comprehensive anti-retaliation policy that is clear, enforceable, and well-publicized. This policy should unequivocally state that retaliation against anyone who reports misconduct in good faith will not be tolerated.
  • Swift Action Against Retaliation. Establish clear, enforceable consequences for retaliatory behavior. If an employee experiences retaliation, act quickly to investigate the claim and, if necessary, take disciplinary action against those responsible. Publicize these actions (while maintaining confidentiality) to reinforce the message that retaliation will not be tolerated.
  • Training on Anti-Retaliation Laws. Train employees on your internal anti-retaliation policies and relevant external whistleblower protection laws. This training should be frequent and tailored to different levels of the organization, from entry-level employees to executives.
  • Monitor and Measure. Implement systems to track whistleblower reports and any subsequent actions. Regularly review this data to identify patterns or areas of concern, such as departments with higher rates of reported retaliation. Use this information to refine your policies and training, ensuring continuous improvement in your approach to whistleblower protection.

Build Trust Through Transparency

Trust is the cornerstone of any effective whistleblower program. Employees must know their concerns will be taken seriously and handled with integrity.

  • Transparency in Investigations. When a report is made, ensure the investigation process is transparent, thorough, and impartial. Keep the whistleblower informed (within the bounds of confidentiality) about the investigation’s progress and any resulting outcomes.
  • Fair Treatment of Whistleblowers. Scrutinize how whistleblowers are treated within your organization, especially if they are involved in the misconduct they reported. The DOJ will examine whether whistleblowers are treated fairly and without bias compared to others involved in the same incidents.
  • Celebrate Whistleblowers. Consider recognizing and celebrating employees who come forward with important information. While this can be a sensitive area, public acknowledgment (where appropriate) can reinforce the organization’s value of ethical behavior and speak up.

Evaluate and Improve Continuously

Finally, the DOJ will look for evidence that companies are committed to whistleblower protection and continuously improving their programs.

  • Regular Program Assessments. Conduct periodic assessments of your whistleblower program to ensure it remains effective and aligned with the latest regulatory expectations. This could involve employee surveys, focus groups, or third-party audits.
  • Act on Feedback. Use the insights gained from these assessments to make meaningful changes. Continuous improvement should be a core component of your whistleblower program, whether improving reporting channels, enhancing training, or refining policies.
  • Regular Training on Reporting Mechanisms. Incorporate training on internal reporting systems and external whistleblower programs into your regular compliance training. Employees should know how to report internally and to external regulators if necessary.
  • Assess Training Effectiveness. Regularly assess the effectiveness of this training through quizzes, feedback surveys, or audits. Ensure that employees understand the reporting systems and feel empowered to use them.

Nicole Argentieri emphasized the DOJ’s heightened focus on whistleblower protections within corporate compliance programs. This comes on the heels of the DOJ’s new whistleblower awards program and underscores the critical role of speak-up cultures in identifying and mitigating misconduct. For compliance professionals, this shift means more than just updating policies; it requires a fundamental reassessment of how your organization encourages, protects, and values whistleblowers. Here’s how you can align your compliance program with the DOJ’s expectations.

Her remarks make it clear that the DOJ is placing a renewed emphasis on whistleblower protections as a critical component of corporate compliance programs. For compliance professionals, this is both a challenge and an opportunity. By reinforcing your policies, fostering a culture of speaking up, demonstrating zero tolerance for retaliation, building trust, and committing to continuous improvement, you can meet the DOJ’s expectations and create a more ethical, transparent, and resilient organization.

The 2024 ECCP made it abundantly clear that companies must have robust, accessible reporting mechanisms and unwavering whistleblower protections. For compliance professionals, this means creating a culture that supports and actively encourages reporting. By setting up effective hotlines, fostering a positive reporting culture, ensuring thorough investigations, and protecting whistleblowers from retaliation, your compliance program will meet DOJ standards and contribute to a healthier, more ethical workplace. In today’s regulatory environment, the effectiveness of your reporting mechanism and commitment to whistleblower protection are no longer just best practices—they are imperatives.