Women at the Table

Safeguarding Human Rights in the Age of Artificial Intelligence UN Business & Human Rights Forum

Session co-organized by the Working Group on Business and Human Rights, European Commission, OHCHR B-tech Project, AI & Equality (by Women @ the Table), Investor Alliance for Human Rights, Council on Ethics for the Swedish National Pension Funds, and World Benchmarking Alliance.

Interpretation in English, French and Spanish

Brief description of the session:
As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes increasingly embedded in public and private sector decision-making, its development, procurement and deployment during times of crisis and transformation raises urgent human rights concerns. From biased algorithms in hiring and surveillance to opaque decision-making in public services, the impacts can be particularly acute for at-risk communities. These technologies often reflect and reinforce existing inequalities, especially when developed without adequate understanding of the social, cultural, and political contexts in which they are deployed.

Businesses developing, procuring or deploying AI have a responsibility to respect human rights, as outlined by the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs), including by implementing human rights due diligence which, in the AI context, must be early, ongoing, and context-specific. It must also involve meaningful stakeholder engagement, particularly at-risk communities. States also have a duty to protect individuals from AI-related harms, requiring a “smart mix” of regulatory and policy measures to align corporate conduct with human rights. This includes embedding human rights due diligence into AI regulation, ensuring coherence across national and global levels, and anchoring regulatory approaches in human rights—not just safety or security. These measures should apply across sectors and emphasize transparency, accountability, and data protection throughout the AI lifecycle.

In the public sector, procurement processes are a critical yet underutilized safeguard to ensure AI systems respect human rights. Meanwhile, in the private sector, investor and civil society pressure is mounting to hold businesses accountable for digital rights harms. Gendered impacts of AI, including online violence, surveillance, and algorithmic bias, further underscore the need for intersectional approaches. This session will explore how development, procurement, regulation, and stakeholder engagement can be leveraged to identify, prevent and mitigate adverse human rights impacts of AI systems.

Key objectives of the session: 
  • Examine how public procurement processes can serve as a frontline defense for human rights in AI deployment.
  • Explore the intersection of AI, gender, and digital rights, and how the UNGPs can guide rights-respecting innovation.
  • Highlight the role of investors  and civil society in driving corporate respect for human rights and holding companies accountable for AI-related harms.
  • Identify practical tools, frameworks, and data sources that support rights-based AI governance.
Key discussion questions: 
  • How can procurement frameworks be designed to anticipate and mitigate adverse human rights impacts in public services, particularly amidst crises and transformation?

 

Moderators
PostDoc Researcher at the Compliant & Accountable Systems Group (University of Cambridge & Research Center Trustworthy Data Science and Security) and Research Consultant at AI & Equality, Women@theTable Emma works towards empowering people and institutions to interrogate, scrutinise, and shape AI systems. Together with AI & Equality (by Women @ the Table), she promotes an actionable and human rights-based approach to AI development and deployment.
Speakers: 
Member, UN Working Group on business and human rights
Ms. Lyra Jakulevičienė is an international legal scholar specialising in international and European Union law, human rights law in particular, for more than two decades. She is a Professor and the Dean of the Law School of Mykolas Romeris University in Lithuania.

Isabel Ebert
Adviser/Human Rights Officer, OHCHR B-Tech
Adviser/Human Rights Officer at UN Human Rights and co-lead of the B-Tech project, Member of the OECD AI Group of Experts and guest lecturer at the University of St. Gallen and Sciences Po Paris.

Thobekile Matimbe
Senior Manager Partnerships and Engagements, Paradigm Initiative, Paradigm Initiative
Thobekile Matimbe is a human rights lawyer and Senior Manager Partnerships and Engagements at Paradigm Initiative (PIN) where she dedicates her skills to the advancement of digital rights and inclusion in Africa and beyond. She is an avid researcher with civic engagement and human rights advocacy expertise.
Head of Social Research, ESG Engagement and Voting, Amundi
Luda Svystunova is Head of Social Research within Amundi’s ESG Research, Engagement and Voting Team. She was previously Acting Responsible Investment Lead at Ardevora Asset Management, and prior to working in finance, she worked in business academia and management consulting.
Senior Manager, AI Safety, Kakao Corp.
1. At Kakao Corp:
– Senior Manager, Al Safety Team (Feb ’25~Current)
– Project Leader, Group Tech Ethics Team, Corporate Alignment Center (Mar ’24~Feb ’25)
– Senior Manager, Human Rights and Tech Ethics Team (Nov ’22~Mar ’24)
Anna Lupi
Legal and Policy Officer in the Responsible Business Conduct, European Commission, Directorate General Growth
Anna is a Legal and Policy Officer in the Responsible Business Conduct unit at the European Commission DG Growth, where she deals with the Forced Labour Regulation and RBC practices in public procurement.
Last modified: December 2, 2025