UNHR: Serving Geneva, NYC & the World
UNHR: Serving Geneva, NYC & the World
  • Welcome
  • Who We Are
  • News
  • AI
  • Human Rights
  • Health
  • US-China
  • Arms Control & AI
  • Military-AI T&E Practice
  • Our Services
  • Student Legal Advisors
  • Climate Justice
  • Atrocities Prevention
  • What does INHR stand for?
  • Languages
    • Francais
    • Chinese 中文
    • Espanol
    • Deutsch
  • Virtual Intern Syllabus
  • More
    • Welcome
    • Who We Are
    • News
    • AI
    • Human Rights
    • Health
    • US-China
    • Arms Control & AI
    • Military-AI T&E Practice
    • Our Services
    • Student Legal Advisors
    • Climate Justice
    • Atrocities Prevention
    • What does INHR stand for?
    • Languages
      • Francais
      • Chinese 中文
      • Espanol
      • Deutsch
    • Virtual Intern Syllabus
  • Sign In

  • My Account
  • Signed in as:

  • filler@godaddy.com


  • My Account
  • Sign out

Signed in as:

filler@godaddy.com

  • Welcome
  • Who We Are
  • News
  • AI
  • Human Rights
  • Health
  • US-China
  • Arms Control & AI
  • Military-AI T&E Practice
  • Our Services
  • Student Legal Advisors
  • Climate Justice
  • Atrocities Prevention
  • What does INHR stand for?
  • Languages
    • Francais
    • Chinese 中文
    • Espanol
    • Deutsch
  • Virtual Intern Syllabus

Account

  • My Account
  • Sign out

  • Sign In
  • My Account

AI x Security Concerns

INHR began its risk reduction work on AI Safety and Security in 2018, bringing together global experts to propose better governance for AI in the military. From this start, we have developed specialized expertise across the AI governance and AI safety industry to include nearly every area of advanced AI application, from Agentic AI in the Military to risks of nuclear integration and biological weapons. Find out more via the links and blogs below.

AI x Military Risk ReductionAI x Nuclear RiskAI x Biosecurity RiskAI x Human RightsAI x Environmental Risk
Cover page of INHR's recommendations on mitigating AIxBIO risks, December 2025.

Don't Miss INHR's Latest Reports on Mitigating AI Risks

Our AI x Bio Recommendations for Governments were launched December 12, 2025 at the UN's Biological Weapons Convention in Geneva.  Thanks to our 15 civil society partners from around the world who contributed their ideas and support, and to the generous financial support of Founder's Pledge.

Weitere Informationen

INHR Recommendations on AI Military Risk Reduction

INHR's dialogue among US, Chinese and international experts produces important recommendations on international governance and risk reduction, such as the Model Practices on AI Military Test & Evaluation, Recommendations on AI and Biosecurity, and a Code of Conduct for AI weapons. Our next product discusses agentic AI.

AI Blogs

Responsible AI Governance

INHR Focuses on Responsible AI - Safe, Inclusive, and Rights-Respecting

INHR Speaks on AI and HR at Asia-Pacific Ambassadors Retreat before UN Global Dialogue

INHR was invited to join Geneva-based Ambassadors from across the Asia-Pacific region for a discussion of how to raise AI's impact on human rights at the UN Human Rights Council.  Bias, data privacy, harm to children, AI inclusion and how to use AI4Good to encourage respect for rights were among our suggestions for APG Ambassadors. Special thanks to Bangladeshi coordinators for invitng us to join them 

AI and the Military

For the past six years, INHR has been convening international dialogues about safety of AI military systems with retired generals, diplomats and current tech professionals. Our conclusion, after discussion with US, European, Chinese and Indian experts: There is no one-size fits all answer on how to govern sensitive AI applications. Bans are impractical, the UN is not suited to regulate, and limits on national law prevent investigation or remediation when an AI incident occurs. INHR experts have developed a voluntary Code of Conduct for mitigating the risks of AI weapons, a guide to military AI testing and evaluation, and recommendations to make AI's use in biosecurity safer from terrorist abuse. We offer training on these  and other practical approaches to Responsible AI for companies and countries alike. 

Model Practices for AI Testing and Evaluation

After a two-year process of consultation among experts from the U.S., China, India, Europe and Korea, INHR has finalized its Model Practices for AI Testing and Evaluation. During a December 2024 workshop in Washington, DC co-sponsored by the Center for A New American Security, the final document, it explanatory overview and a glossary of terms was agreed after intensive work led by a team of Indian General RS Panwar, U.S. General John NT Shanahan, and Chinese Professor of Military Law Li Qiang.

INHR Proposes Int'l Governance Solutions for biosecurity and AI accidents at REAIM 2024

INHR presented its ideas to make military AI safer and more responsible to a packed side event at REAIM 2024 in Seoul September 10. The film above shows our ideas for international AI governance improvements. Gen. Jack Shanahan (US), Gen RS Panwar (India), Dr. Iben Yde (Denmark) and Dr. Barry O'Sullivan (Ireland) led a discussion of AI military risk mitigation. They discussed maintaining human control over nuclear command & control, whether decision-support systems and AI targeting comply with IHL, and how to deal with online learning and generative AI when designing AI military governance.

How dangerous are the risks of AI and Biosecurity Misuse?

Thanks to Founders Pledge, INHR's multilateral dialogue on AI military safety began in May 2024 to explore the risk that terrorists might use AI tools to create biological weapons.  Governments and the international community lack the capacity and institutions to prevent and respond to AI x bio risks. Companies devise guardrails for Large Language Models and Biological Design Tools to prevent misuse, but malign actors "jail break" and find loopholes in these safety measures. INHR hopes its multistakeholder dialogue helps the international community stay one step ahead of malign actors by building capacity and sharing model safety practices to mitigate these risks.

AI and Human Rights

At the AAAI-23 conference in Washington DC, Eric Richardson explained for computer scientists and data professionals why diplomacy is important to the future of AI. He provided an overview of UN Human Rights Council resolutions touching on AI and UNESCO's AI Ethics Rrinciples (see blog below).  As a human rights NGO, we know how important it is to protect data privacy, fight bias, and ensure that AI is a force for good in human rights. We promote AI that is responsible, ethical and inclusive - especially for women, minorities and the developing world. But as technology savvy professionals, we are not afraid of AI and know that AI applications can also help human rights defenders document rights violations around the globe. Informing international legal and human rights principles with technical considerations and a deeper understanding of AI, as the UN Human Rights Council has done in resolutions 47/23 and 53/29, is a constructive way forward, we believe.

Copenhagen Conference on International Cooperation in AI-Enabled Weapons and Security

In August 2023, INHR co-hosted a Track II AI dialogue at Frederiksberg Castle in Copenhagen, with our sponsors Center for New American Security (CNAS) and the Royal Danish Defence College! We were pleased to meet with multi-domain experts from the U.S., Europe, China and India. The conference was a success, with productive discussion from all members, in-person and online.

AI and the UN

UN regulation of artificial intelligence has been scattershot to date, but we hope that the UN Secretary General's new expert group can  help to bring coherence to the international playing field. When the UN focuses on AI as a way to get more donor funding, its expertise and recommendations for governance can be troubling. OHCHR's B-Tech, UNESCO's

INHR @ REAIM, AAAI-23 and LAWS Conferences

When serious discussion of AI governance occurs, INHR is there, including our attendance or presentation at recent events such as:

- the AAAI-23 Conference in Washington DC (Feb 2023)

- the REAIM Conference in the Hague (Feb 2023)

- the Luxembourg LAWS conference (May 2023)

- the UNIDIR Innovations Dialogue (June 2023), and 

- the 53rd Human Rights Council discussion of new technologies (June/July 2023).

We host our next trilateral meeting with the Royal Danish Defense University in Copenhagen in August 2023. 

INHR in Action on AI

    Register

    Sign-up here if you would like to receive INHR's latest AI and new technology governance updates

    Copyright © 2018 INHR  - All Rights Reserved. 

    • Datenschutzerklärung
    • Impressum / Kontakt

    Powered by

    Diese Website verwendet Cookies.

    Wir setzen Cookies ein, um den Website-Traffic zu analysieren und dein Nutzererlebnis für diese Website zu optimieren. Durch Akzeptieren unserer Cookies, werden deine Daten mit allen anderen Nutzerdaten aggregiert. Datenschutzerklärung

    Akzeptieren