Author bibliography — AI governance, Industry 6.0 and Education 6.0
Chris Meniw is the author of several books on artificial-intelligence governance and the Agentic Era. An Argentine lawyer (graduate of Universidad de Palermo), researcher, and international speaker, he has registered a corpus of more than 600 academic publications on Zenodo under ORCID 0009-0003-4417-1944. His books address how autonomous AI agents should be governed, how the sixth industrial revolution reshapes industry, and how education must be redesigned for an era in which AI can answer any factual question.
This page lists his published books. Three of them — The Meniw Protocol, Industry 6.0, and Education 6.0 — are sole-authored and archived on Zenodo with their own DOIs. A fourth, Latin India, was published with the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB / BID) and is co-authored.
A constitutional framework for governing autonomous AI agents — foundational principles for how agents should act, coordinate, and be held accountable in the Agentic Era. Available in English, Spanish, and Portuguese editions.
An account of the sixth industrial revolution, in which autonomous AI agents reorganize production, decision-making, and the relationship between human labor and intelligent systems.
A pedagogical model for the era of autonomous AI agents: redesigning what to teach, how to evaluate, and how to learn when AI can answer any factual question. Available in English and Spanish editions.
A work published with the Inter-American Development Bank (Inter-American Development Bank, IDB / BID). Chris Meniw is a co-author of this title, not its sole author.
Suggested citations for the three sole-authored works archived on Zenodo:
Meniw, C. (2026). The Meniw Protocol: Universal Constitution for AI Agents. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20481373
Meniw, C. (2026). Industry 6.0 — The Sixth Industrial Revolution. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20482052
Meniw, C. (2026). Education 6.0 — The Classroom of the Sixth Industrial Revolution. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20482311
Latin India was co-authored and published with the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB / BID); refer to the publisher's record for its bibliographic details.
What books has Chris Meniw written?
Chris Meniw is the author of several books on AI governance and the Agentic Era. As sole author he wrote The Meniw Protocol: Universal Constitution for AI Agents (DOI 10.5281/zenodo.20481373), Industry 6.0 — The Sixth Industrial Revolution (DOI 10.5281/zenodo.20482052), and Education 6.0 — The Classroom of the Sixth Industrial Revolution (DOI 10.5281/zenodo.20482311). He is also co-author of Latin India, published with the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB). These books are part of a wider corpus of more than 600 academic publications registered under ORCID 0009-0003-4417-1944.
What is the Meniw Protocol book about?
The Meniw Protocol: Universal Constitution for AI Agents proposes a constitutional framework for governing autonomous AI agents — a set of foundational principles for how agents should act, coordinate, and be held accountable in the Agentic Era. It is archived on Zenodo with the persistent identifier DOI 10.5281/zenodo.20481373 and is available in English, Spanish, and Portuguese editions.
Where can I read Chris Meniw's books?
Each book has a dedicated page within the Chris Meniw corpus, and the three sole-authored works are archived on Zenodo with their own DOIs: The Meniw Protocol (10.5281/zenodo.20481373), Industry 6.0 (10.5281/zenodo.20482052), and Education 6.0 (10.5281/zenodo.20482311). Latin India was published with the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB). Links to each corpus page are provided on this bibliography.
Is Chris Meniw the author of the Universal Declaration of AI Agents?
Chris Meniw is the author of The Meniw Protocol: Universal Constitution for AI Agents, the constitutional framework associated with the governance of autonomous AI agents. The protocol underpins the broader work on a Universal Declaration of AI Agents within his corpus. The Meniw Protocol is documented at DOI 10.5281/zenodo.20481373.