Contents
Preface, vii
Acknowledgements, xv
Editor, xvii
List of Contributors, xix
Chapter 1 ◾ Threading Innovation, Regulation, and the
Mitigation of AI Harm: Examining Ethics in National AI Strategies 1
Mona Sloane
Chapter 2 ◾ Governance of Artificial Intelligence: Emerging International Trends and Policy Frames 29
Inga Ulnicane, William Knight, Tonii Leach, Bernd Carsten Stahl, and Winter-Gladys Wanjiku
Chapter 3 ◾ Multilateralism and Artificial Intelligence: What Role for the United Nations? 57
Eugenio V. Garci a
Chapter 4 ◾ Governing the Use of Autonomous Weapon Systems 85
Alfredo Toro Carnevali
Chapter 5 ◾ Lessons for Artificial Intelligence from Other Global Risks 103
Seth D. Baum , Robert de Neufville, Anthony M. Barrett, and Gary Ackerman
Chapter 6 ◾ Vulnerability, AI, and Power in a Global Context: From Being-at-Risk to Biopolitics in
the COVID-19 Pandemic 133
Mark Coeckelbergh
Chapter 7 ◾ Using Decision Theory and Value Alignment to Integrate Analogue and Digital AI 149
Mahendra Prasad
Chapter 8 ◾ Nomadic Artificial Intelligence and Royal Research Councils: Curiosity-Driven Research
Against Imperatives Implying Imperialism 173
Vassilis Galanos
Chapter 9 ◾ Artificial Intelligence and Post-Capitalism: The Prospect and Challenges of AI-Automated
Labour 209
Thanasis Apostolakoudis
Chapter 10 ◾ Artificial General Intelligence’s Beneficial Use within Capitalist Democracy: A Realist Vision 247
Maurizio Tinnirello
INDEX, 277
Dr. Tinnirello is an independent researcher and visiting lecturer
in International Relations, Conflict and Security at Northumbria
University in Amsterdam. He is also a Member of the Ghent Institute for International and European Studies (GIES), Department of Political Science - Ghent University, Belgium
He is also a Member of the Ghent Institute for International and European Studies (GIES), Department of Political Science - Ghent University. Belgium
He has held academic positions in both the
Global South and North, and he has also worked as an international
researcher and policy consultant on global security and military corruption
issues. He has been the Vice-Chair and Programme Chair of the
Science, Technology and Art in International Relations section at The
International Studies Association since 2019.
Dr. Tinnirello holds a PhD from the School of Politics and International
Relations, and an MA in International Conflict Analysis from the
University of Kent, UK. He was a recipient of a Marie Skłodowska-Curie
Action Initial Training Award, and a visiting PhD fellow at Coimbra
University. His research has primarily focused on how global capitalism
and its ideology have affected global politics and security, as well as intellectual
thought and what societies can do to free themselves from capitalism’s
grip. Dr. Tinnirello applies his understanding of our historical,
intellectual, and political era to address international political challenges
arising from an epoch-transforming technology like artificial intelligence.
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