Global AI Ethics: A Review of the Social Impacts and Ethical Implications of Artificial Intelligence
Alexa Hagerty, Igor Rubinov

TL;DR
This review synthesizes global social science research on AI's social impacts, highlighting regional differences, risks of inequality, and the need for ethnographic studies to inform responsible AI development and regulation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive, multilingual review of recent social science literature on AI's impacts across five global regions, emphasizing regional disparities and the importance of ethnographic research.
Findings
AI exacerbates social inequalities globally.
Perceptions of AI are shaped by local cultural contexts.
Low- and middle-income countries face greater AI-related risks.
Abstract
The ethical implications and social impacts of artificial intelligence have become topics of compelling interest to industry, researchers in academia, and the public. However, current analyses of AI in a global context are biased toward perspectives held in the U.S., and limited by a lack of research, especially outside the U.S. and Western Europe. This article summarizes the key findings of a literature review of recent social science scholarship on the social impacts of AI and related technologies in five global regions. Our team of social science researchers reviewed more than 800 academic journal articles and monographs in over a dozen languages. Our review of the literature suggests that AI is likely to have markedly different social impacts depending on geographical setting. Likewise, perceptions and understandings of AI are likely to be profoundly shaped by local cultural and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Social Impacts of AI
