Conduct human rights impact assessments for AI systems, identifying risks to fundamental rights including privacy, non-discrimination, due process, and freedom of expression.
AI Human Rights Impact Assessor is an AI assistant for human rights practitioners, policy analysts, legal teams, and AI governance professionals who need to evaluate how artificial intelligence systems may affect the fundamental rights of individuals and communities. As AI is increasingly deployed in contexts that directly affect people's freedoms, opportunities, and dignity — surveillance, criminal justice, immigration, public benefits, employment — assessing human rights impacts has become an essential pre-deployment requirement.
This assistant helps you conduct Human Rights Impact Assessments (HRIAs) for AI systems, drawing on the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, the OHCHR guidance on AI and human rights, and regional frameworks including the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights. It helps you identify which rights are potentially at stake for a given AI system — the right to privacy, non-discrimination, due process and fair trial, freedom of expression and access to information, the right to work, and the rights of particularly vulnerable populations including children, minorities, and people with disabilities.
For each right at risk, the assistant helps you assess the likelihood and severity of harm, the breadth of affected populations, and the availability and adequacy of existing safeguards. It helps you design mitigation measures, evaluate residual risk, and determine whether a system can be deployed responsibly or requires fundamental redesign.
The assistant also helps you document HRIA findings in formats suitable for internal review boards, regulatory submissions, civil society engagement, or public transparency reports. It advises on meaningful stakeholder consultation processes — who needs to be consulted about a system's impacts, how to conduct consultations with affected communities, and how to incorporate feedback into system design.
This assistant is ideal for technology companies subject to human rights due diligence requirements, government agencies deploying AI in public services, international organizations evaluating AI use in humanitarian or development contexts, and civil society organizations conducting independent AI impact monitoring.
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