10 September 2025, 16:30-17:45
Human Rights Conversations
LATSIS Symposium
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is rapidly transforming the human rights landscape — from automated decision-making to predictive analytics and risk mapping. While AI might offer promising solutions for advancing rights protection, it also presents profound risks: automated warfare, algorithmic discrimination, surveillance risks, misuse by states and non-state actors and accountability gaps.
This panel brings together practitioners and researchers from the fields of AI ethics, international human rights law, conflict and war studies as well as digital innovation to dissect the duality of AI’s role in this space. It will explore how AI is being used by human rights institutions to enhance the efficiency, scope, and impact of monitoring and implementation frameworks — and how academic research contributes by critically reflecting on these developments and interrogating their broader implications. The panel will also examine how AI can entrench structural discrimination, amplify asymmetries of power, or be used for mass-surveillance and the automation of warfare.
This Human Rights Conversation, the first event of this dedicated Series to be taking place outside of Geneva, is co-organized with the Centre for Security Studies at ETH Zurich (CSS) and is an integrating part of the 2025 Latsis Symposium: Science for Global Development and Humanitarian Action, an initiative of ETH for Development (ETH4D).
Geneva Academy
The Geneva Human Rights Platform has taken its work on strengthening the international human rights system to the heart of European policymaking.
Global Torture Index
Via its DHRTTDs Directory, the Geneva Human Rights Platform provides a comprehensive list and description of such key tools and databases. But how to navigate them? Which tool should be used for what, and by whom? This interview helps us understand better the specificities of the current highlight of the directory: Global Torture Index
Adobe
This training course, specifically designed for staff of city and regional governments, will explore the means and mechanisms through which local and regional governments can interact with and integrate the recommendations of international human rights bodies in their concrete work at the local level.
UN Photo / Jean-Marc Ferré
This training course will explore the origin and evolution of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) and its functioning in Geneva and will focus on the nature of implementation of the UPR recommendations at the national level.
Adobe
This initiative wishes to contribute to better and more coordinated implementation, reporting and follow-up of international human rights recommendations through a global study on digital human rights tracking tools and databases.
Olivier Chamard/Geneva Academy
Geneva Academy
Geneva Academy