Résumé
This article introduces the concept of the ‘dual footprint’ as a heuristic device to capture the commonalities and interdependencies between the different impacts of artificial intelligence (AI) on the natural and social surroundings that supply resources for its production and use. Two in-depth case studies, each illustrating international flows of raw materials and of data work services, portray the AI industry as a value chain that spans national boundaries and perpetuates inherited global inequalities. The countries that drive AI development generate a massive demand for inputs and trigger social costs that, through the value chain, largely fall on more peripheral actors. The arrangements in place distribute the costs and benefits of AI unequally, resulting in unsustainable practices and preventing the upward mobility of more disadvantaged countries. The dual footprint grasps how the environmental and social dimensions of the dual footprint emanate from similar underlying socio-economic processes and geographical trajectories.
| langue originale | Anglais |
|---|---|
| journal | Globalizations |
| Les DOIs | |
| état | Accepté/En presse - 1 janv. 2025 |
SDG des Nations Unies
Ce résultat contribue à ou aux Objectifs de développement durable suivants
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SDG 8 Travail décent et croissance économique
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SDG 12 Consommation et production responsables
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