AI governance: UN gathers 193 countries in Geneva for first Global Dialogue
The Global Dialogue on AI Governance opens today in Geneva — the first UN platform where every country discusses the rules for artificial intelligence.
Artificial intelligence finally has a table where everyone gets a seat. The Global Dialogue on AI Governance opens today, 6 July, in Geneva, bringing together the UN’s 193 member states, tech companies, academia and civil society for two days — the first time AI governance is being discussed on a universal platform rather than in restricted clubs of wealthy countries.
What is the Global Dialogue on AI Governance?
It is the forum created by the UN General Assembly under the Global Digital Compact, for governments to share practices and converge on approaches to regulating artificial intelligence. It produces no binding rules — the model is the Internet Governance Forum: two days of discussion and a co-chairs’ summary at the end. This first session runs on 6-7 July in Geneva; the second is scheduled for New York in May 2027.
Is it useful if it binds no one?
That is the right question — and the honest answer is: it depends what you ask of it. Nobody leaves Geneva with a “world AI law”. But at a moment when the technology is evolving faster than any national regulator can track, and warnings about serious risks keep piling up, having 193 countries in the same room is the first step towards rules that are not written by half a dozen capitals and half a dozen companies. For Europe — and Portugal — betting on its own path for AI, it is also a stage to defend that vision.
See also: Europe’s push for sovereign AI. Official programme at un.org.
By Oliver Grant
Image: Vassil / Wikimedia Commons (CC0)