Many Worlds of AI: Conference Proceedings
You can look for particular papers/abstracts using the search box above. You can see the full list of suggested hashtags, denoting different stakeholder groups, specific countries, as well as specialists themes, here.
Taking off with ease or Face-off with Justice? Mapping Digital Citizenship and ‘Ways of Seeing’ the Indian Biometric State
by Madhavi Shukla (Jawaharlal Nehru University)
Contentious Others: Logo and Dilemmas of Difference in the US, Britain, and France
by Apolline Taillandier (University of Cambridge and University of Bonn)
Conceptions of Ethics in World-Making Machines: Colonial Iconographies of AI in Britain
by Peter Rees (We and I)
Praxis, or the Yugoslav Search for Man: Thinking and Human Self-Realization in the Age of Generative AI
by Ana Ilievska (Stanford University)
Confronting AI at the Margin: Conflicts around Faith, Hope, and Identity in Bangladesh
Panel Discussion: Sharifa Sultana (Cornell University and Facebook Fellow) , Mohammad Rashidujjaman Rifat (University of Toronto and Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society) and Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed (University of Toronto)
Lost History and overlooked Present: Mechanical and Artificial Intelligence in the Arabic culture
by Reham Hosny (The University of Cambridge/ Minia University)
Developing a Legal Framework for AI in Qatar and Beyond
by Barry Solaiman (Hamad Bin Khalifa University and Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar)
Islamic Ethical Discourse on AI: Three Challenges in Focus
by Mohammed Ghaly (Hamad Bin Khalifa University)
AI Projects in the Gulf Region and their Ethical Questions: An Analytical Overview
by Ala Al-Fuqaha (Hamad Bin Khalifa University)
African world of AI: a people-centered approach to responsible AI
by Makouchi Sam Nkwo (University of Namibia), Annastasia Shipepe (University of Namibia), Shaimaa Lazem (City of Scientific and Technological Applications), and Anicia Peters (University of Namibia)
AI, Journalism, and the Ubuntu Robot in Africa: A quest for a normative framework
by Greg Gondwe (California State University - San Bernardino and Institute for Social Media Rebooting, Harvard)
Artificial Intelligence, Data Capitalism, and Bioethics in Sub-Sahara Africa
by Golden Lwando Mwinsa, Professor Benjamin Ferguson and Professor Frances Griffiths (University of Warwick)
Can the Ghost Worker Speak? De-colonializing Digital Labor
by Sergio Genovesi (University of Bonn)
“Made in Europe”: exporting European values to the peripheries through the regulation of Artificial Intelligence - an exploratory analysis of the case of Morocco.
by Oumaima Hajri (Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences)
Big Tech and its adversaries: Situating platform power within the geopolitical battle for data
by Amber Sinha (Policy Data Institute, Kampala and Mozilla Foundation)
Automating Desire: Laws of sex robotics in the US and South Korea
by Michael Thate (Princeton University and Northwestern Pritzker School of Law)
To Build “Fairer AI”, First Thoroughly Understand “Fairness”: A Multidisciplinary Review Through an Intercultural Lens
by Was Rahman (Coventry University)
AI Regulation in Brazil: National Knowledge or Foreign Appropriation?
by Marina Garrote (Brasil Research Association and University of São Paulo), Paula Guedes (Catholic University of Portugal), and Bruno Bioni (Data Privacy Brasil Research Association and Brazilian Data Protection Authority)