Calls for global cooperation to enhance AI governance, prevent risks, and ensure equitable access. Opposes AI misuse, disinformation, and sovereignty violations. Promotes ethical principles, legal frameworks, and equal rights in AI development. Encourages international collaboration, especially supporting developing countries.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a non-binding international declaration that uses voluntary language ('should', 'call on', 'welcome') and lacks formal enforcement mechanisms, penalties, or sanctions. It represents principles and recommendations for global AI governance cooperation.
The document has good coverage of approximately 10-12 subdomains, with strong focus on malicious actors (4.1, 4.2), AI system security (2.2), misinformation (3.1, 3.2), discrimination (1.1), privacy (2.1), governance failure (6.5), competitive dynamics (6.4), and AI safety concerns (7.1, 7.3, 7.4). Coverage is concentrated in security, misuse prevention, governance, and fairness domains.
This is a cross-sectoral international governance initiative that does not target specific economic sectors. Instead, it establishes broad principles for AI governance applicable across all sectors globally. The document explicitly mentions military applications and references general societal impacts, but does not regulate specific industries.
The document addresses multiple AI lifecycle stages with emphasis on development practices (Build and Use Model), deployment considerations, and ongoing monitoring. It covers the entire lifecycle from design principles through operational oversight, with particular focus on governance frameworks that span all stages.
The document uses general terminology referring to 'AI technologies' and 'AI systems' broadly without defining specific technical categories. It does not explicitly mention frontier AI, general purpose AI, foundation models, generative AI, or compute thresholds. The focus is on AI governance principles applicable across all AI types.
Chinese central government
The document is explicitly identified as being issued by the Chinese central government authority in the document metadata. It represents a state-level initiative calling for global AI governance cooperation.
No specific enforcement body or mechanism is designated in this document. It is a voluntary, non-binding declaration without formal enforcement provisions.
Proposed international institution within the United Nations framework
The document proposes the establishment of an international institution within the UN framework to coordinate AI governance efforts, which would serve a monitoring and coordination function.
All countries, governments, international organizations, companies, research institutes, civil organizations, individuals, R&D entities
The document explicitly addresses multiple stakeholder types including governments, companies, research institutes, and R&D entities. It calls for participation from all countries and various organizational types in AI governance.
19 subdomains (5 Good, 14 Minimal)