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HASS Inaugural Lecture - Professor Ana Beduschi

The Inaugural Lecture for Professor Ana Beduschi of the Law School

Why do human rights matter for the governance of digital technologies? Professor Ana Beduschi’s research and teaching focus on international human rights law, technology and international migration and refugee law. Her recent publications examine the regulatory approaches to digital technologies and human rights, the impact of Covid-19 health status certificates on human rights, the implications of artificial intelligence for international migration management, the opportunities and challenges presented by digital identity, and the implications of big data and artificial intelligence for humanitarian action. She is currently the Director of the Research Centre for Science, Culture and the Law at the University of Exeter Law School.


Event details

Why do human rights matter for the governance of digital technologies?

 

Rapid developments in technology, particularly in generative artificial intelligence, are increasingly transforming our world. From “smart assistants” on our phones to algorithms designed to improve health diagnostics, digital technologies are now everywhere.


However, these technologies are not neutral, and depending on how they are designed, developed and deployed, they may have important consequences for the promotion, protection and respect of human rights. This is particularly relevant in terms of the impact that digital technologies may have on the rights to privacy, equality, non-discrimination, freedom of expression, freedom of association and assembly, and access to remedies in case their uses result in harm.


In this talk, based on my research over the last decade, I will argue that policymakers and lawmakers should adopt a comprehensive approach to human rights for the governance of digital technologies. This approach should go beyond the protection of data privacy, which is often the focus of debates.


The legal and policy choices we are making today will have profound implications on what our lives and the world around us will look like ten or twenty years from now. It is time to view human rights not as a barrier to technological innovation, but rather as a framework within which innovation can happen – and thus create a digital future that is just, fair and equitable for all.

HASS Inaugural Lecture - Professor Ana Beduschi

Professor Ana Beduschi

Location:

Building:One Bateman Lecture Theatre