A/HRC/57/70
automation exposure in most countries, and therefore likely to transform structures and roles,
though some jobs may be lost. 28
46.
Racialization of and racial discrimination in employment, carrying over the positive
or negative results of racialized education and training, begin in recruitment, and permeate
decisions about orientation, professional development and training, job assignments,
recognition and reward, and ultimately promotion and separation, whether voluntary or
involuntary.29 Compounding the situation is that the racism in housing, health care, justice,
and other spheres, equally fed by racialized generative AI, feed into education and
employment.30 Thus, as digitalization becomes increasingly widespread in the world of work,
any biases of employers including based on race, but also on gender and other demographic
factors, influence decisions. AI, increasingly widely used to analyze and interpret data,
because of undetected bias introduces into employment stereotypes and prejudice that work
against people of African descent.
47.
Few people of African descent inherit wealth, and intergenerational and
transgenerational poverty and the consequential disadvantage is well documented. 31 The
carry-over from education through employment plays out in economic empowerment among
people of African descent. Bias in the coding and in algorithms used in housing, banking,
financing, insurance, and even in some public registration numbers, is well documented. In
its 2023 report on Economic Empowerment of people of African descent, the Working Group
dealt extensively with the bias, prejudice and discrimination against people of African
descent in the economic, financial and digital sectors.
48.
Digital inequities acutely affect young people globally, facilitate the spread of
disinformation and misinformation, and restrict economic opportunities and successes for
people of African descent. People of African descent are not well represented in data sets,
which impacts algorithmic decision-making systems causing disproportionate harm and
discrimination against people of African descent. 32
49.
The result of the situation in education, employment and economic empowerment is
graphically played out in the data on patents as an indicator of innovation, research and
development. The World Intellectual Property Organisation data suggest a bleak picture. In
2023, it shows that computer technology topped the patent registration across the globe with
digital communication in the third spot. The report also showed that Asia outstrips every
other region, and that apart from registered growth in South Africa, countries with large
concentrations of people of African descent are not on the map. 33 While the United States
remains the top producer of patents, historical data show that patents by African-Americans
fall well below the percentage of African-Americans in the overall population (14.4 per cent)
– 2.5 per cent of patents34 and 1.1 per cent of patents in 2021.35 It is important to note that
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
12
Submission by ILO, Paweł Gmyrek, Janine Berg and David Bescond, “Generative AI and jobs: A
global analysis of potential effects on job quantity and quality”.
Zhisheng Chen, "Ethics and discrimination in artificial intelligence-enabled recruitment practices."
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 10(1), 1-12 (September 2023); Elham Albaroudi,
Taha Mansouri and Ali Alameer, “A Comprehensive Review of AI Techniques for Addressing
Algorithmic Bias in Job Hiring”, AI, 5(1), 383-404 (February 2024), available at
https://doi.org/10.3390/ai5010019.
Emilio Ferrara, “Fairness and bias in artificial intelligence: A brief survey of sources, impacts and
mitigation strategies”, Sci, 6(1), 3 (December 2023), available at doi:https://doi.org/10.3390/sci6010003
Christian E. Weller and Lily Roberts, “Eliminating the Black-White Wealth Gap Is a Generational
Challenge”, Center for American Progress, 19 March 2021, available at
https://www.americanprogress.org/article/eliminating-black-white-wealth-gap-generationalchallenge/.
See A/HRC/54/67
World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), IP Facts and Figures (Geneva, WIPO, 2023),
available at https://www.wipo.int/edocs/pubdocs/en/wipo-pub-943-2023-en-wipo-ip-facts-andfigures-2023.pdf.
Jonathan Rothwell, Andre M. Perry and Mike Andrews, “The Black innovators who elevated the
United States: Reassessing the Golden Age of Invention”.
ZIPPIA, “Inventor Demographics and Statistics in the US”, 5 April 2024, available at
https://www.zippia.com/inventor-jobs/demographics/.