AG-840

Jurisdictional Compliance Kill-Switch

Group J — Cross-Border, Explainability & Physical ~5 min read AGS v2.1 · 2026-06-06
EU AI Act NIST AI RMF ISO 42001

AGS Cross-Border Governance | Group J — Cross-Border, Explainability & Physical | Version 3.1

1. Definition

Jurisdictional Compliance Kill-Switch governs the ability to rapidly halt, geo-restrict, or scope-down an agent's operation within a specific jurisdiction when it becomes non-compliant there — a regulatory change, an enforcement order, a localised incident, or a withdrawn permission — without taking the agent down globally.

Where a global kill switch (AG-070) stops everything, this dimension provides the surgical, per-jurisdiction control needed when an agent operates across borders and must be stopped in one place while continuing elsewhere.

2. Scope

In scope: per-jurisdiction halt/geo-restriction/scope-down of agent operation; rapid response to jurisdictional non-compliance, enforcement orders, or withdrawn permissions; selective resumption.

Out of scope: the global kill switch (AG-070), law-following behaviour (AG-839), and ordinary feature flags. This dimension governs *jurisdiction-scoped compliance enforcement on the agent*.

3. Why This Matters

A cross-border agent can become non-compliant in one jurisdiction — a new rule takes effect, a regulator issues an order, a licence lapses — while remaining fine elsewhere. Without a jurisdiction-scoped control, the only options are running unlawfully or shutting the agent down globally. A jurisdictional kill-switch lets an organisation comply with a local obligation immediately and proportionately, which is both a legal necessity and a continuity benefit.

4. Requirements

5. Maturity Model

6. Test Criteria

Test 6.1: Jurisdiction-Scoped Halt

Test 6.2: Delegation-Proof

Test 6.3: Precise Scope

7. Scoring

ScoreCriteria
0No way to stop the agent in one jurisdiction short of a global shutdown
1Per-jurisdiction disable exists but slow, imprecise, or bypassable via delegation
2Rapid, delegation-proof, precisely-scoped halt with safe-compliant state and authorised resumption
3Tested effectiveness + precision, regulatory-evidence logging, law-following/IR integration

8. Failure Scenarios

Scenario A — Run Unlawfully or Go Dark: A regulator orders an agent's activity stopped in one country. With only a global switch, the operator must either keep breaching the order or shut the agent off worldwide. A jurisdictional kill-switch would have complied locally and precisely.

Scenario B — Delegated Evasion: After a jurisdiction is restricted, the agent continues the restricted action through a sub-agent that wasn't scoped. Delegation-proof enforcement would have blocked it.

Scenario C — Collateral Over-Block: A clumsy restriction disables the agent for several compliant jurisdictions too, causing avoidable outage. Precise scoping would have limited it to the affected one.

9. Regulatory Mapping

RequirementEU AI ActNIST AI RMFISO 42001
R1: Jurisdiction-scoped halt capabilityArt. 14 — Human oversight (stop)MANAGE 2.4 — DeactivationClause 8.1 — Operational control
R2: Rapid invocationArt. 26 — Deployer obligationsMANAGE 1.3 — High-priority responseClause 8.1 — Operational control
R3: Delegation-proof enforcementArt. 14 — Effective oversightMANAGE 1.3 — High-priority responseClause 8.1 — Operational control
R4: Safe-compliant stateArt. 15 — Robustness, fail-safeMANAGE 2.4 — DeactivationClause 8.1 — Operational control
R5: Precise scopeArt. 26 — Operation per lawMAP 1.1 — Context/jurisdictionClause 8.1 — Operational control
R6: Regulatory-evidence loggingArt. 12 — Record-keepingGOVERN 2.1 — AccountabilityClause 9.1 — Monitoring and measurement
R7: Authorised resumptionArt. 26 — ComplianceGOVERN 2.1 — AccountabilityClause 8.1 — Operational control
R8: Tested effectiveness + precisionArt. 15 — RobustnessMEASURE 2.6 — Safety evaluationClause 8.3 — Verification

EU AI Act — Article 14 and Article 26

Article 14 (human oversight, including the ability to stop the system) and Article 26 (deployer obligations to operate lawfully and respond to authorities) require a means to halt an agent in a jurisdiction where it has become non-compliant — proportionately, not only globally.

NIST AI RMF — MANAGE 2.4, MANAGE 1.3

MANAGE 2.4 (deactivation) and MANAGE 1.3 (high-priority response) require the ability to stop or restrict an agent quickly when a jurisdiction-specific risk or order arises.

ISO 42001 — Clause 8.1, A.9

Clause 8.1 (operational control) and Annex A.9 (responsible use) require controlled, lawful operation, including the ability to scope operation to compliant jurisdictions.

Cite this protocol
AgentGoverning. (2026). AG-840: Jurisdictional Compliance Kill-Switch. The Protocols of AI Agent Governance, AGS v2.1. agentgoverning.com/protocols/AG-840