With support from the Government of the Republic of Korea, Youth4Disarmament launched the Sci-fAI Futures Youth Challenge in May 2024. This creative science-fiction storytelling challenge engaged young people to explore the risks and opportunities of artificial intelligence (AI) and its implications for peace and security. The project ended in September 2025, its outputs remain available at the link below.
Activity Type Research/Reports/AssessmentsAwareness/AdvocacyThis Position Paper focuses on the key human rights risks of developing and using relevant AI systems to counter terrorism. It addresses how the design, development and use of AI engages international human rights law, how human rights must inform decisions relating to the operation of AI systems, and the responsibilities of public authorities and private actors. Specifically, Part I outlines the characteristics and uses of AI systems that are most relevant in countering terrorism, as well as their limitations and main human rights risks. Part II extends the human rights analysis further by focusing on some key rights affected by AI systems, including equality and non-discrimination, privacy and data protection, freedom of expression and access to information, fair trial, liberty and rights in detention, and effective remedies for human rights violations. The Conclusion and Recommendations build on existing AI governance frameworks by identifying further opportunities to strengthen regulation and accountability in the development and deployment of AI systems in countering terrorism.
Activity Type Research/Reports/AssessmentsPolicy/Regulatory GuidanceAwareness/AdvocacyThis activity supports strategic engagement on the implications of artificial intelligence for the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC). As AI increasingly intersects with the life sciences, it is becoming more important for States Parties to understand how such developments may shape biological research and development, influence the risk landscape, and raise new governance and implementation questions under the Convention. The activity responds to this need by fostering informed dialogue, generating policy-relevant analysis, and helping translate technical developments into structured, accessible and policy-relevant inputs for multilateral discussion under the BWC. It places particular emphasis on issues such as AI-enabled biological design tools, dual-use implications, responsible governance, and the need for effective and forward-looking science and technology review. In doing so, it contributes to strengthening understanding of how the Convention may remain responsive to emerging technological change in a timely, informed and policy-relevant manner.
Activity Type Research/Reports/AssessmentsPolicy/Regulatory GuidanceAwareness/Advocacy