Bridging Human Rights and Data Science at the 2025 Latsis Symposium

22 September 2025

The 2025 Latsis Symposium on Science for Global Development and Humanitarian Action, organized by ETH for Development (ETH4D), gave prominent space to human rights issues — through two events co-organized by the Geneva Human Rights Platform (GHRP) and the Center for Security Studies at ETH Zurich (CSS), with contributions from the UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR) and HURIDOCS.

On 10 September 2025, the GHRP and CSS co-hosted the Symposium’s opening panel, 'AI and Human Rights: Risks and Promises.' Held just before the keynote of ICRC Vice-President Gilles Carbonnier, the session was part of the ongoing Human Rights Conversation Series and brought together UN, academic, and civil society voices to debate AI’s transformative role for human rights. Speakers highlighted both the opportunities — faster monitoring, early warning, and more efficient analysis — and the risks, including bias, surveillance, and opacity.

‘We stand at a turning point. Artificial intelligence could profoundly transform how we protect and monitor human rights. But its benefits and dangers are intertwined — the outcome will depend on the choices we make today,’ noted Felix Kirchmeier, Executive Director of the GHRP, in his opening remarks.

On 12 September 2025, an interactive workshop on 'Information Management and Machine Learning for Human Rights' provided a more hands-on perspective. Demonstrations of OHCHR’s Universal Human Rights Index and National Recommendations Tracking Database, alongside HURIDOCS’ open-source tool Uwazi, showed how digital platforms already transform human rights information management. Building on the GHRP’s Digital Human Rights Tracking Tools and Databases (DHRTTD) initiative, the workshop brought together ETH students, UN practitioners, and civil society actors to co-develop ideas on multilingual natural language processing, secure petition handling, and interactive learning tools for rights awareness. Importantly, the workshop also served as a conduit for new collaboration: OHCHR and ETH representatives agreed to pursue joint projects with a link to AI, including through the recently launched UN–ETH Student Team.

‘The effect of AI on human rights depends on the frameworks we design, the ethical limits we set, and the collaborations we foster,’ concluded Domenico Zipoli, Senior Research Fellow and project Coordinator at the GHRP. ‘If we work across disciplines and sectors, we can ensure that AI becomes a force that strengthens — rather than weakens — the protection of human dignity.’

Together, the panel and workshop underscored the importance of bridging disciplines. Human rights experts bring context and values; technologists bring analytical and design skills. Only by combining these strengths can ethical, scalable, and impactful digital tools be developed to strengthen the protection of human dignity.

MORE ON THIS THEMATIC AREA

disops News

Impact of digital disinformation unpacked in new research brief series

9 April 2025

Our new series of Research Briefs examine the impact of digital disinformation and potential solutions for its regulation

Read more

GHRP Ai for Good Workshop News

Exploring the Role of Artificial Intelligence in Human Rights Monitoring: Key Takeaways from the AI for Good Workshop

22 July 2025

Our event brought together human rights practitioners, data scientists, and AI experts to explore how artificial intelligence can support efforts to monitor human rights and the Sustainable Development Goals.

Read more

Town Hall Meeting Training

Localizing International Human Rights

8-10 October 2025

This training course, specifically designed for staff of city and regional governments, will explore the means and mechanisms through which local and regional governments can interact with and integrate the recommendations of international human rights bodies in their concrete work at the local level.

Read more

A general view of participants during of the 33nd ordinary session of the Human Rights Council. Training

The Universal Periodic Review and the UN Human Rights System: Raising the Bar on Accountability

10-14 November 2025

This training course will explore the origin and evolution of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) and its functioning in Geneva and will focus on the nature of implementation of the UPR recommendations at the national level.

Read more

Session of a UN Treaty Body Project

Treaty Bodies Individual Communications Procedures

Started in January 2019

Read more

A destroyed camp for internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Khor Abeche, South Darfur, Project

Understanding the Relationship between Conflict, Security and the Human Right to a Clean, Healthy and Sustainable Environment

Started in May 2023

This project will develop guidance to inform security, human rights and environmental debates on the linkages between environmental rights and conflict, and how their better management can serve as a tool in conflict prevention, resilience and early warning.

Read more

Cover of the 2023 Geneva Academy Annual Report Publication

Annual Report 2024

published on July 2025

Read more