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New article published in Cambridge Forum on AI: Law and Governance: Redress In AI governance

Yulu Pi (Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies, University of Warwick) and Maddie Proctor (Harvard Social Studies) have co-authored a new article,
“Toward Empowering AI Governance with Redress Mechanisms,” published in the Cambridge Forum on AI: Law and Governance. linkLink opens in a new window
The piece addresses a critical gap in current AI governance: the lack of effective redress mechanisms for individuals harmed by AI systems. While much
regulatory focus has been on preventing potential harms, the authors argue that this must be complemented by pathways for justice when harms do occur. The paper presents a four-step framework for redress—(1) initiating the redress process, (2) determining appropriate avenues for redress, (3) collecting evidence to support claims and (4) receiving and responding to decisions —and highlights the need to embed these processes into AI governance to ensure accountability and protect individual rights in an increasingly AI-integrated world.

Mon 16 Jun 2025, 15:45 | Tags: publications