What rights matter? Examining the place of social rights in the EU’s artificial intelligence policy debate

References to ‘European values’ are often rooted in some perception of a commitment to particular rights that uphold certain principles about democracy and the relationship between state, market and citizens. Whilst rarely translated into consistent policy frameworks or activities, the formulation o...

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Main Authors: Jędrzej Niklas, Lina Dencik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society 2021-09-01
Series:Internet Policy Review
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Online Access:https://policyreview.info/node/1579
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author Jędrzej Niklas
Lina Dencik
author_facet Jędrzej Niklas
Lina Dencik
author_sort Jędrzej Niklas
collection DOAJ
description References to ‘European values’ are often rooted in some perception of a commitment to particular rights that uphold certain principles about democracy and the relationship between state, market and citizens. Whilst rarely translated into consistent policy frameworks or activities, the formulation of new policy areas, such as artificial intelligence (AI), provide a window into what priorities, interests and concerns currently shape the European project. In this paper, we explore these questions in relation to the recent AI policy debate in the European Union with a particular focus on the place of social rights as a historically pertinent but neglected aspect of policy debates on technology. By examining submissions to the recent public consultation on the White Paper on AI Strategy, we argue that social rights occupy a marginal position in EU’s policy debates on emerging technologies in favour of human rights issues such as individual privacy and non-discrimination that are often translated into design solutions or procedural safeguards and a commitment to market creation. This is important as systems such as AI are playing an increasingly important role for questions of redistribution and economic inequality that relate to social rights. As such, the AI policy debate both exposes and advances new normative conflicts over the meaning of rights as a central component of any attachment to ‘European values’.
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spelling doaj-art-9c19a4b8889e4ff8bf3d6ab284f6bae52025-08-20T03:16:06ZengAlexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and SocietyInternet Policy Review2197-67752021-09-0110310.14763/2021.3.1579What rights matter? Examining the place of social rights in the EU’s artificial intelligence policy debateJędrzej Niklas0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2878-3134Lina Dencik1Cardiff UniversityCardiff UniversityReferences to ‘European values’ are often rooted in some perception of a commitment to particular rights that uphold certain principles about democracy and the relationship between state, market and citizens. Whilst rarely translated into consistent policy frameworks or activities, the formulation of new policy areas, such as artificial intelligence (AI), provide a window into what priorities, interests and concerns currently shape the European project. In this paper, we explore these questions in relation to the recent AI policy debate in the European Union with a particular focus on the place of social rights as a historically pertinent but neglected aspect of policy debates on technology. By examining submissions to the recent public consultation on the White Paper on AI Strategy, we argue that social rights occupy a marginal position in EU’s policy debates on emerging technologies in favour of human rights issues such as individual privacy and non-discrimination that are often translated into design solutions or procedural safeguards and a commitment to market creation. This is important as systems such as AI are playing an increasingly important role for questions of redistribution and economic inequality that relate to social rights. As such, the AI policy debate both exposes and advances new normative conflicts over the meaning of rights as a central component of any attachment to ‘European values’.https://policyreview.info/node/1579Social rightsArtificial intelligenceEuropean UnionEuropean valuesDatafication
spellingShingle Jędrzej Niklas
Lina Dencik
What rights matter? Examining the place of social rights in the EU’s artificial intelligence policy debate
Internet Policy Review
Social rights
Artificial intelligence
European Union
European values
Datafication
title What rights matter? Examining the place of social rights in the EU’s artificial intelligence policy debate
title_full What rights matter? Examining the place of social rights in the EU’s artificial intelligence policy debate
title_fullStr What rights matter? Examining the place of social rights in the EU’s artificial intelligence policy debate
title_full_unstemmed What rights matter? Examining the place of social rights in the EU’s artificial intelligence policy debate
title_short What rights matter? Examining the place of social rights in the EU’s artificial intelligence policy debate
title_sort what rights matter examining the place of social rights in the eu s artificial intelligence policy debate
topic Social rights
Artificial intelligence
European Union
European values
Datafication
url https://policyreview.info/node/1579
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