Artificial intelligence and human rights

Artificial intelligence and human rights Edited by Alberto Quintavalla & Jeroen Temperman. - 1st ed. - Oxford (UK): Oxford University Press ; 2023. - xxxvii, 641 p.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

AI life cycle and human rights : risks and remedies / Artificial intelligence and the right to liberty and security / Artificial intelligence and religious freedom / Artificial intelligence and freedom of expression / Artificial intelligence and freedom of assembly / Artificial intelligence and the right to property : the human rights dimension of intellectual property / Artificial intelligence and the right to privacy / The rights to privacy and data protection and facial recognition technology in the Global North / Privacy, political participation, and dissent : facial recognition technologies and the risk of digital authoritarianism in the Global South / The production of and control over data in the AI-Era : the two failing approaches to privacy protection / Artificial intelligence, the public space, and the right to be ignored / Artificial intelligence and racial discrimination / Artificial intelligence and gender-based discrimination / Artificial intelligence and LGBTQ+ rights / Artificial intelligence and women's rights : deepfake technology / Artificial intelligence and disability rights / Artificial intelligence and fair trial rights / Artificial intelligence and data analytics : a recipe for human rights violations / Artificial intelligence and the right to an effective remedy / Artificial intelligence technologies and the right to seek and enjoy asylum : an overview / Artificial intelligence screening and the right to asylum / Artificial intelligence and the right to food / Artificial intelligence and the right to housing / Artificial intelligence and human rights at work / Artificial intelligence and the right to health / Artificial intelligence and consumer protection rights / Artificial intelligence and the right to a healthy environment / Artificial intelligence and human rights : understanding and governing common risks and benefits / Human rights, legal personality, and artificial intelligence : what can epistemology and moral philosophy teach law? / Robot rights/human responsibility / The limits of AI decision-making : are there decisions artificial intelligence should not make? / Smart cities, artificial intelligence, and public law : an unchained melody / Putting private sector responsibility in the mix : a business and human rights approach to artificial intelligence / Artificial intelligence human rights impact assessment / Real-life experimentation with artificial intelligence / Martina Smuclerova, Lubos Kral, and Jan Drchal -- Valentina Golunova -- Jeroen Temperman -- Giovanni De Gregorio and Pietro Dunn -- Margaret Warthon -- Letizia Tomada and Raphaele Xenidis -- Alessia Zornetta and Ignacio Cofone -- Natalia Menendez Gonzalez -- Malcolm Katrak and Ishita Chakrabarty -- Bart van der Sloot -- Andrea Pin -- Louis Koen and Kgomotso Mufamadi -- Fabian Lutz -- Masuma Shahid -- Marilia Papaleo Gagliardi -- Antonella Zarra, Silvia Favalli and Matilde Ceron -- Helga Molbk-Steensig and Alexandre Quemy -- Migle Laukyte -- Sarah de Heer -- Raimy Reyes -- Dhruv Somayajula -- Adekemi Omotubora -- Caroline Compton and Jessie Hohmann -- Joe Atkinson and Philippa Collins -- Enrique Santamaria Echeverria -- Shu Li, Beatrice Schutte and Lotta Majewski -- Alberto Quintavalla -- Kostina Prifti, Alberto Quintavalla and Jeroen Temperman -- Klaus Heine -- David Gunkel -- Florian Gamper -- Soria Ranchord�as -- Isabel Ebert and Lisa Hsin -- Alessandro Ortalda and Paul De Hert -- Elizaveta Gromova and Evert Stamhuis.

"The scope of Artificial Intelligence’s (AI) hold on modern life is only just beginning to be fully understood. Academics, professionals, policymakers, and legislators are analysing the effects of AI in the legal realm, notably in human rights work. Artificial Intelligence technologies and modern human rights have lived parallel lives for the last sixty years, and they continue to evolve with one another as both fields take shape. Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights explores the effects of AI on both the concept of human rights and on specific topics, including civil and political rights, privacy, non-discrimination, fair procedure, and asylum. Second- and third-generation human rights such as the right to food, right to housing, right to health and right to a healthy environment are also addressed. By mapping this relationship, the book clarifies the benefits and risks for human rights as new AI applications are designed and deployed. After carrying out designated thematic human rights studies of AI impact, the last part of the volume is devoted to systemic and foundational questions at the crossroads of AI and human rights. These reflexive and critical pieces include questions of legal personality, business and human rights regulation, the need for human rights impact assessments, and human rights-conducive experimentation with AI. The coupling of a bird’s eye view with a granular perspective makes Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights a seminal text on the legal ramifications of machine learning"--

9780192882493 019288249X 9780192882509 0192882503 9780191976797 0191976792


Artificial intelligence--Law and legislation.
Human rights.
Droits de l'homme (Droit international)
Intelligence (AI) & Semantics.
Computers.
Civil Rights.
Law.
Human Rights.
Political science.
Artificial intelligence--Law and legislation
Human rights
Politics & government.
Politics and Government.


Electronic book.

K564 / .A78 2023

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