Artificial Intelligence for a Fair, Just, and Equitable World

Fecha de publicación

2023-02-01T10:39:37Z

2023-02-01T10:39:37Z

2021-03-15

2023-02-01T10:39:38Z

Resumen

From the 1970s onward, we started to dream of the leisure society in which, thanks to technological progress and consequent increase in productivity, working hours would be minimized and we would all live in abundance. We all could devote our time almost exclusively to personal relationships, contact with nature, sciences, the arts, playful activities, and so on. Today, this utopia seems more unattainable than it did then. Since the 21st century, we have seen inequalities increasingly accentuated: of the increase in wealth in the United States between 2006 and 2018, adjusted for inflation and population growth, more than 87% went to the richest 10% of the population, and the poorest 50% lost wealth [1] . Following the crisis of 2008, social inequalities, rights violations, planetary degradation, and the climate emergency worsened and increased (see [2] ). In 2019, the world's 2153 billionaires had more wealth than 4.6 billion people [3] . The World Bank estimates that COVID-19 will push up to 150 million people into extreme poverty [4] .

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Inglés

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IEEE

Documentos relacionados

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1109/MTS.2021.3056292

IEEE Technology and Society Magazine, 2021, vol. 40, num. 1, p. 19-24

https://doi.org/10.1109/MTS.2021.3056292

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(c) IEEE, 2021

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