Abstract

AI governance is like one of those mythical creatures that everyone speaks of but which no one has seen. Sometimes, it is reduced to a list of shared principles such as transparency, non-discrimination, and sustainability; at other times, it is conflated with specific mechanisms for certification of algorithmic solutions or ways to protect the privacy of personal data. We suggest a conceptual and normative approach to AI governance in the context of a global digital public goods ecosystem to enable progress on the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Conceptually, we propose rooting this approach in the human capability concept—what people are able to do and to be, and in a layered governance framework connecting the local to the global. Normatively, we suggest the following six irreducibles: a. human rights first; b. multi-stakeholder smart regulation; c. privacy and protection of personal data; d. a holistic approach to data use captured by the 3Ms—misuse of data, missed use of data and missing data; e. global collaboration (‘digital cooperation’); f. basing governance more in practice, in particular, thinking separately and together about data and algorithms. Throughout the article, we use examples from the health domain particularly in the current context of the Covid-19 pandemic. We conclude by arguing that taking a distributed but coordinated global digital commons approach to the governance of AI is the best guarantee of citizen-centered and societally beneficial use of digital technologies for the SDGs.

Highlights

  • The Covid-19 pandemic has been a rude awakening, and not just for public health systems

  • Can digital technologies especially their latest presumably intelligent avatars be our savior? Could Artificial Intelligence (AI) fuelled by data help developing countries leapfrog to higher standards of living without straining the planet’s resources further and without compromising the agency and human rights of their citizens? Could such technologies help their richer cousins shift to more sustainable modes of economic growth while addressing inequity and exclusion? And could they help deliver high quality and affordable health care everywhere, and prevent future pandemics from destroying lives and livelihoods at the scale we are witnessing over the past year with the novel corona virus?

  • Before we address the key issue of governance, it is important to establish a clear conceptual foundation for digital technologies in the context of sustainable development

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Summary

Human capacity and human agency

Further conceptual work in promoting a shared view of Development 2.0 enabled by digital technologies would be helpful in avoiding (false) dichotomies between control and promotion of use when it comes to governing the deployment of Artificial Intelligence for the SDGs or between providers of data and of AI solutions [14]. Without a shared conceptual vocabulary, the designers, the deciders and the practitioners of digitally enabled development would be like the proverbial blind men around an elephant. With one, they will have more confidence in their actions across subject domains and borders

Layered governance
Human rights first
Multi‐stakeholder smart regulation
Privacy and protection of personal data
A holistic approach to data
Global collaboration
A global digital commons approach to AI governance
Solutions exchange architecture that:
Conclusion
34. Coronavirus
43. See for instance
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