Resources

  • AI & Responsible Journalism Toolkit

    The Toolkit is intended for a broad range of stakeholders shaping public perceptions of AI. It aims to empower journalists, PR specialists, and researchers to communicate the risks and benefits of AI more responsibly: to avoid perpetuating problematic AI narratives, to foster inclusivity and diversity in discussions about AI, and to promote critical AI literacy.

  • Many Worlds of AI – Conference Proceedings

    Proceedings from the Many Worlds of AI: Intercultural Approaches to the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence conference, that took place at Jesus College, Cambridge, from the 26th to the 28th of April 2023, and was organised by the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence at University of Cambridge with the Center for Science and Thought at the University of Bonn.

  • AI and the Digital - Seminar Archive

    The archive of the AI and the Digital seminar series, hosted and streamed by The Philosopher (official Journal of the Philosophical Society of England), the Center for Science and Thought, the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence and Gloknos at Cambridge University.

  • Mercator Lecture for AI in the Human Context – Video archive

    Mercator Lecture for AI in the Human Context – Video archive

    The ‘Mercator Lectures for AI in the Human Context’ are organized as part of the ‘Desirable Digitalization: Rethinking AI for Just and Sustainable Futures’ research project, a collaboration between the Universities of Bonn and Cambridge, funded by Stiftung Mercator. In these lectures, the respective Mercator Visiting Professors give an insight into their work and current issues in the research of desirable AI and digitization.

  • Circuit board illustration

    AI, Democracy, and Mis/disinformation Report

    This report summarises the findings from the Policy Workshop on AI, Democracy and Mis/disinformation, organised by the Centre for Science and Policy (CSaP), University of Cambridge in partnership with the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence at the University of Cambridge. The workshop brought together participants from academia, civil society, and other relevant experts for a roundtable discussion under the Chatham House Rule.