Vigilance regarding the use of digital tool: AI and the Rule of Law
In 2021, Judicial operators in 100 countries expressed interest in learning about AI and the rule of law in a survey launched as part of UNESCO’s Judges Initiative. Judicial operators worldwide requested capacity building support in two domains: the use of AI in judicial systems as an administrative and assistive tool and the legal implications of AI in society in general.
In response to these needs, UNESCO launched its Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) on AI and the Rule of Law with the National Judicial College, United States that has reached 4500 judicial operators in 7 languages in 138 countries. The workshop will introduce this course to the participants and share how it can be used for capacity building at the national level. The session will also discuss how judicial operators in the EU can engage with other UNESCO tools for the judiciary like the upcoming train-the-trainer manual on AI and the webinars on generative AI, intellectual property, metaverse and artificial intelligence related evidence.
Vigilance regarding the use of digital tool: AI and the Rule of Law
In 2021, Judicial operators in 100 countries expressed interest in learning about AI and the rule of law in a survey launched as part of UNESCO’s Judges Initiative. Judicial operators worldwide requested capacity building support in two domains: the use of AI in judicial systems as an administrative and assistive tool and the legal implications of AI in society in general.
In response to these needs, UNESCO launched its Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) on AI and the Rule of Law with the National Judicial College, United States that has reached 4500 judicial operators in 7 languages in 138 countries. The workshop will introduce this course to the participants and share how it can be used for capacity building at the national level. The session will also discuss how judicial operators in the EU can engage with other UNESCO tools for the judiciary like the upcoming train-the-trainer manual on AI and the webinars on generative AI, intellectual property, metaverse and artificial intelligence related evidence.
Vigilance regarding the use of digital tool: AI and the Rule of Law
In 2021, Judicial operators in 100 countries expressed interest in learning about AI and the rule of law in a survey launched as part of UNESCO’s Judges Initiative. Judicial operators worldwide requested capacity building support in two domains: the use of AI in judicial systems as an administrative and assistive tool and the legal implications of AI in society in general.
In response to these needs, UNESCO launched its Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) on AI and the Rule of Law with the National Judicial College, United States that has reached 4500 judicial operators in 7 languages in 138 countries. The workshop will introduce this course to the participants and share how it can be used for capacity building at the national level. The session will also discuss how judicial operators in the EU can engage with other UNESCO tools for the judiciary like the upcoming train-the-trainer manual on AI and the webinars on generative AI, intellectual property, metaverse and artificial intelligence related evidence.