IGF 2025 Launch / Award Event #184 Whose tech? Our Choices - towards new AI benchmarks

    United Nations Development Programme, Human Development Report Office
    United Nations Development Programme, multilateral, global University of Pretoria,Academia, Africa IBM, Private Sector, Americas/Global NORAD, Government, Europe
    Speakers
    Pedro Conceicao, Director Human Development Report Office (HDRO), United Nations Development Programme, multilateral Emma Ruttkamp-Bloem, Head of the Department of Philosophy and AI Ethics Lead of the Center for AI Research, University of Pretoria, Academia, Africa (TBC) Francesca Rossi, IBM Fellow and the IBM AI Ethics Global Leader, TJ Watson Research Center, Private Sector, Americas (TBC) Håvard Mokleiv Nygård, Director of Knowledge and Evaluations, Norad, Government, Europe (TBC) Joy Buolamwini, President, Algorithmic Justice League, CSO, or Rahul Bhargava, researcher and technologist, Connection Lab, CSO
    Onsite Moderator
    Yu Ping Chan, Head Digital Partnerships & Engagement / Josefin Pasanen, Research & Partnerships Specialist - United Nations Development Programme
    Online Moderator
    Minji Kwag, UNDP
    Rapporteur
    UNDP
    Format
    Theater

    This would be a lightning talk followed by a deep-dive conversation, with the following run of show: Opening: 10 – 15 minute lightning talk / ted-talk style presentation of the 2025 Human Development Report by Pedro Conceicao, Director HDRO, UNDP Deep dive: 30 minutes armchair conversation between Pedro Conceicao and 3 of the listed speakers. The conversation will center around three key guiding questions: What new institutional responses are needed to steer AI toward human development goals? How should existing frameworks evolve to address AI’s unique characteristics and ensure that AI enhances human development? How can benchmarks be reimagined to measure AI’s impact on human well-being, opportunity, and agency? Q&A: 15 minutes for live interaction with the audience & Closing: 2 minutes for closing remarks by the moderator
    Duration (minutes)
    60
    Description
    From the printing press to the steam engine and the interned, technological innovation has always been intimately interlinked with human progress. Now, with the rapid advancement of Artificial Intelligence, technology’s role in driving development has re-emerged at the top of the policy agenda. Is Artificial Intelligence just another technological revolution, or does it present something fundamentally different for human development? The 2025 Human Development explores the AI & human development nexus. Fundamentally, this is a report about people: how AI affects people at different stages of their lives, and how it influences broader social, economic, and political processes. While much of the public debate fixates on AI’s technical capabilities and competitive dynamics – who will “win” the AI race, and whether AI will replace humans – this report argues that we need to shift the conversation. Instead of asking "When will AI surpass human capabilities?" we should be asking "How can AI advance human potential and well-being?" AI’s potential for human development is profound. However, its success depends on more than just algorithms. Overly simplistic approaches risk reinforcing rather than solving systemic problems. Steering AI toward human development goals requires deliberate institutional responses. Market forces alone have often fallen short in delivering inclusive opportunities from technological progress, as evidenced by persistent inequalities, digital divides, and lagging ICT integration in many parts of the world. Many of the challenges associated with AI are not inherent to the technology itself, but stem from how technologies are designed, deployed and interact with the contexts in which they operate, as well as the business models and incentives that shape their use. This lightning talk will present the key findings from the 2025 HDR, along with a deep dive into governance implications of AI’s rapid evolution. A key focus will be the call for a new coalition for AI benchmarks that allows us to align AI with human development goals. To align AI more closely with development goals, new benchmarks are needed—ones that evaluate AI’s contributions to human potential rather than just its technical efficiency. This requires a multi-stakeholder effort to design and promote benchmarks that measure AI’s role in enhancing well-being, expanding opportunities, and fostering inclusive progress. By establishing these new evaluation standards, we can ensure that AI is not just optimized for speed and accuracy but also for human flourishing. The talk will center around three main questions: - what new institutional responses are needed to steer AI toward human development goals? - How should existing frameworks evolve to address AI’s unique characteristics and ensure that AI enhances human development? - How can benchmarks be reimagined to measure AI’s impact on human well-being, opportunity, and agency?

    1. How will you facilitate interaction between onsite and online speakers and attendees? We will ensure real-time interaction through live polling, Q&A sessions, and chat. Attendees, both onsite and online, will be encouraged to share their thoughts and questions using online tools. 2. How will you design the session to ensure the best possible experience for online and onsite participants? Interactive tools and platforms will be used to engage both onsite and online participants; onsite participants will be given the opportunity to interact with speakers in real time, while online participants will be encouraged to ask questions through the platform. 3. Please note any complementary online tools/platforms you plan to use to increase participation and interaction during the session. Slido, Mentimeter, or Zoom webinar plug ins such as chat and Q&A for audience interaction and live polling. These tools will facilitate engagement from both onsite and online participants efficiently.