Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Global Justice

Minds and Machines 35 (4):1-29 (2025)
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Abstract

This paper provides a philosophically informed and robust account of the global justice implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI). We first discuss some of the key theories of global justice, before justifying our focus on the Capabilities Approach as a useful framework for understanding the context-specific impacts of AI on lowto middle-income countries. We then highlight some of the harms and burdens facing low- to middle-income countries within the context of both AI use and the AI supply chain, by analyzing the extraction of materials, which includes mineral extraction and the environmental harms associated with it, and the extraction of labor, which includes unethical labor practices, low wages, and the trauma experienced by some AI workers. We then outline some of the potential harms and benefits that AI poses, how these are distributed, and what global justice implications this has for low- to middle-income countries. Finally, we articulate the global justice significance of AI by utilizing the Capabilities Approach. We argue that AI must be considered from a global justice perspective given that, globally, AI puts significant downward pressure on several elements of well-being thereby making it harder for people to achieve threshold levels of the central human capabilities needed for a life of dignity.

Author Profiles

Paul Formosa
Macquarie University
Siavosh Sahebi
Macquarie University

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