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Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights, Human Rights Law Review, Volume 25, Issue 1, March 2025, ngae031, https://doi.org/10.1093/hrlr/ngae031
In the book ‘Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights’, Alberto Quintavalla and Jeroen Temperman combine a wide-ranging and timely analysis of the profound implications of artificial intelligence for human rights. Published by Oxford University Press, the book extends to over 688 pages, organized into ten parts that cover various legal, ethical and policy issues arising from the growing impact of AI technologies on aspects of individual rights and social equity. Contributions from renowned experts in various areas comprehensively explore how AI intersects with civil and political liberties, privacy, procedural justice, non-discrimination and socio-economic rights. The contribution, therefore, places Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights as an essential reference to academics, policy practitioners, and legal experts concerned with responsible human-centered AI governance frameworks in their development. The book’s structure is meticulously organized, with each part focusing on specific intersections between AI and various human rights concerns. The first part establishes the ‘AI lifecycle’ and associated human rights risks and provides an introductory framework. Subsequent chapters, between Part II and Part IX, relate AI to different themes, such as impacts on civil and political rights, privacy, non-discrimination, fair procedural rights, asylum, socio-economic rights and environmental protection.
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