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AI Governance in 2020

Jun 2021

The pandemic in 2020 shows that global catastrophes are live possibilities. It is a warning shot that should encourage foresight and cooperation for improving the collective resilience of humanity. In the coming decades, the governance of AI might be one of the most important global issues. We believe that global and interdisciplinary insights are critical for guiding the development of AI for the common good.

The report was contributed by 52 experts from 47 institutions, including AI scientists, academic researchers, industry representatives, policy experts, and others. This group of experts covers a wide range of regional developments and perspectives, including those in the United States, Europe and Asia. The report later evolved into a comprehensive volume titled “A Global Perspective of AI Governance (Vol.1).”

Authors: Shi Qian, Li Hui, Brian Tse, John E. Hopcroft, Bart Selman, Gong Ke, Claudia Ghezzou, Cuervas-Mons, Emma Bluemke, Zhou Pengyuan, Andrew Trask, Zhang Jiawei, Alex Pentland, Brian Christian, Roman Yampolskiy, Anand S. Rao, Abhishek Gupta, Irene Solaiman, Yang Fan, Danil Kerimi, Steven Hofman, Omar Costilla-Reyes, Allan Dafoe, Alexs Carile, Jared T. Brown, Petra Ahrweiler, Martin Neumann, Malavika Jayaram, Nathalie Smuha, Wendell Wallach, Marie-Therase Png, Markus Knauff, Urvashi Aneja, Victor Famubode, Olga Cavali, Edson Prestes, Constanza Gomez Mont, Irakli Beridze, Jean Garcla Periche, Danit Gal, José Guridi Bustos, Seán Ó hÉigeartaigh, Cyrus Hodes, Eugenio Vargas Garcia, Eva Kaili, Charlotte Stix, Caroline Jeanmaire, Fu Ying, Zhao Zhiyun, Su Jun, Li Xiuquan, Wang Guoyu, Wang Yingchun, Arisa Ema, Raj Shekhar, Poon King Wang
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