欧盟法律中人工智能的环境挑战:从《人工智能法》(AIA)及其缺陷中吸取的教训

IF 2.4 Q2 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE
U. Pagallo, Jacopo Ciani Sciolla, M. Durante
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引用次数: 6

摘要

目的本文旨在研究欧盟法律中人工智能(AI)的环境挑战,这些法律既考虑了人工智能技术的非法使用,即人工智能的过度使用或滥用,也考虑了其可能的使用不足。这篇论文的目的是展示立法者的这种监管努力应该如何被理解为欧盟机构绿色协议的关键组成部分,即拯救我们的星球免受贫困、掠夺和破坏。设计/方法论/方法为了说明人工智能可以以不同的方式代表我们环境挑战的游戏规则改变者,我们注意到了一种多学科的方法,其中包括对欧洲绿色协议倡议的分析;关于数据治理和人工智能的新法律框架的提案;环境法和宪法原则;环境法和宪法的这些原则和规定与人工智能条例的相互作用;欧盟法律及其成员国的其他来源。Findings最近关于人工智能的举措,包括欧盟委员会的《人工智能法》(AIA),都坚持以人为中心的方法,而环境法的挑战,包括人工智能引发的挑战,显然应该按照以个体为中心而不是以人类为中心的立场来解决。该论文就这种短视观点的法律后果提出了四条建议,包括AIA缺乏环境问题。研究局限性/含义AI的环境挑战建议用新一代的生态影响评估来补充欧盟立法者目前的监管努力;注意义务和披露非财务信息;执行欧盟宪法一体化原则的更明确参数;针对未充分利用人工智能用于环境目的的风险的特殊政策。进一步的研究应该结合可持续性原则和欧盟循环经济计划来审查这些政策,这是绿色协议的另一个关键组成部分。实际含义本文提供了一套具体措施,以妥善解决人工智能的非法使用及其可能未充分用于环境目的的风险。这些措施不仅涉及立法者的“自上而下”努力,还涉及诉讼和法院的作用。气候变化诉讼的当前趋势以及将集体诉讼移植到几个民法管辖区,为我们应对人工智能的环境挑战提供了新的思路,甚至在法庭上也是如此。社会含义通过对AI带来的法律威胁和机会的分析,人们获得高水平环境保护的权利得到了更有力的保护,环境质量也得到了改善,尽管如此,这对任何绿色协议都至关重要,例如当前技术监管领域提案中以人为中心的方法与环境法中传统的以个体为中心的立场之间的区别。该分析首次考虑了人工智能监管领域中这种区别之后的法律问题,以及我们应该如何解决这些问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The environmental challenges of AI in EU law: lessons learned from the Artificial Intelligence Act (AIA) with its drawbacks
Purpose The paper aims to examine the environmental challenges of artificial intelligence (AI) in EU law that regard both illicit uses of the technology, i.e. overuse or misuse of AI and its possible underuses. The aim of the paper is to show how such regulatory efforts of legislators should be understood as a critical component of the Green Deal of the EU institutions, that is, to save our planet from impoverishment, plunder and destruction. Design/methodology/approach To illustrate the different ways in which AI can represent a game-changer for our environmental challenges, attention is drawn to a multidisciplinary approach, which includes the analysis of the initiatives on the European Green Deal; the proposals for a new legal framework on data governance and AI; principles of environmental and constitutional law; the interaction of such principles and provisions of environmental and constitutional law with AI regulations; other sources of EU law and of its Member States. Findings Most recent initiatives on AI, including the AI Act (AIA) of the European Commission, have insisted on a human-centric approach, whereas it seems obvious that the challenges of environmental law, including those triggered by AI, should be addressed in accordance with an ontocentric, rather than anthropocentric stance. The paper provides four recommendations for the legal consequences of this short-sighted view, including the lack of environmental concerns in the AIA. Research limitations/implications The environmental challenges of AI suggest complementing current regulatory efforts of EU lawmakers with a new generation of eco-impact assessments; duties of care and disclosure of non-financial information; clearer parameters for the implementation of the integration principle in EU constitutional law; special policies for the risk of underusing AI for environmental purposes. Further research should examine these policies in connection with the principle of sustainability and the EU plan for a circular economy, as another crucial ingredient of the Green Deal. Practical implications The paper provides a set of concrete measures to properly tackle both illicit uses of AI and the risk of its possible underuse for environmental purposes. Such measures do not only concern the “top down” efforts of legislators but also litigation and the role of courts. Current trends of climate change litigation and the transplant of class actions into several civil law jurisdictions shed new light on the ways in which we should address the environmental challenges of AI, even before a court. Social implications A more robust protection of people’s right to a high level of environmental protection and the improvement of the quality of the environment follows as a result of the analysis on the legal threats and opportunities brought forth by AI. Originality/value The paper explores a set of issues, often overlooked by scholars and institutions, that is nonetheless crucial for any Green Deal, such as the distinction between the human-centric approach of current proposals in the field of technological regulation and the traditional ontocentric stance of environmental law. The analysis considers for the first time the legal issues that follow this distinction in the field of AI regulation and how we should address them.
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来源期刊
Transforming Government- People Process and Policy
Transforming Government- People Process and Policy INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE-
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
11.50%
发文量
44
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