Today and Tomorrow: Prospects for Peace and Pitfalls of Emerging Technologies
30th Workshop of the Study Group "Regional Stability in the South Caucasus" - Policy Recommendations
Beiträge in dieser Publikation:
| Name | Seiten/Dateigröße | |
|---|---|---|
| Today and Tomorrow: Prospects for Peace and Pitfalls of Emerging Technologies | 4 Seiten / 369 KB |
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Vorwort
Artificial Intelligence (AI) can act as a non-neutral force that increasingly mediates ontological security by shaping narrative production, recognition, and legitimacy. While one first thinks about AI as a tool, AI governance itself is a defining act of ontological security. Governments deploy AI-policy vocabularies — such as “trustworthy AI” or “digital sovereignty” — to perform coherent self-images, even as AI-enabled disinformation and deepfakes undermine those same identities. However, AI is not a silver bullet: its constructive use depends on governance that prioritizes trust-building, institutional capacity, and AI literacy. The core challenge, therefore, is not only to navigate the governance of technologies but also to foster an open and resilient narrative environment through which societies can sustain their ontological security without defaulting to conflict.

