A/HRC/57/70
Advance unedited version
Distr.: General
25 September 2024
Original: English
Human Rights Council
Fifty-seventh session
9 September–9 October 2024
Agenda item 9
Racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related
forms of intolerance: follow-up to and implementation
of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action
Fulfilling the economic, social and cultural rights of people of
African descent in the age of digitalization, artificial
intelligence, and new and emerging technologies
Report of the Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent*
Summary
The present document contains the report of the Working Group of Experts on
People of African Descent on its thirty-third session held in Addis Ababa and thirty-fourth
session held in Geneva, both private, and focuses on the theme “Fulfilling the Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights of People of African Descent in the Age of Digitalization,
Artificial Intelligence, and New and Emerging Technologies”, prepared pursuant to
Human Rights Council resolutions 9/14, 18/28, 27/25, 36/23, 45/24 and 54/26.
In the present report, the Working Group examines the implications of
digitalization, artificial intelligence (AI), and new and emerging technologies for people
of African descent. It analyzes embedded racial and other forms of bias, documented
misuse and the actual and potential discriminatory impact, as well as the positive potential,
on the human rights of people of African descent, especially with regard to economic,
social and cultural rights (ESCRs). The Working Group found an alarming gap between
the proliferation and widening application of AI systems and their governance
mechanisms, which, based on the evidence of biases and lack of transparency in the data
and algorithms in their design, can result in disproportionate adverse effects on African
descent populations, in particular in the protection and realization of their ESCRs. This is
systematically overlooked by both public and private regulators, thereby contributing to
the non-respect of obligations under international human rights law, and threatening to
compound and normalize the inherent racism, and exacerbate racial discrimination and
existing inequalities. The Working Group concludes by recommending several positive
measures at the international, national and institutional levels for positive and nondiscriminatory use of digitalisation and AI in the context of the ESCRs of people of
African descent.
* The present report was submitted to the conference services for processing after the deadline so as to
include the most recent information.