CYAIJul 31, 2023

The Ethics of AI Value Chains

arXiv:2307.16787v319 citationsh-index: 12
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work targets researchers, practitioners, and policymakers in AI ethics, but it is incremental as it builds on existing theories without introducing new empirical results.

The paper addresses the need for integrative approaches in AI ethics by proposing AI value chains as a conceptual framework, and it reviews literature to theorize them and recommends future directions for ethical practices.

Researchers, practitioners, and policymakers with an interest in AI ethics need more integrative approaches for studying and intervening in AI systems across many contexts and scales of activity. This paper presents AI value chains as an integrative concept that satisfies that need. To more clearly theorize AI value chains and conceptually distinguish them from supply chains, we review theories of value chains and AI value chains from the strategic management, service science, economic geography, industry, government, and applied research literature. We then conduct an integrative review of a sample of 67 sources that cover the ethical concerns implicated in AI value chains. Building upon the findings of our integrative review, we recommend three future directions that researchers, practitioners, and policymakers can take to advance more ethical practices across AI value chains. We urge AI ethics researchers and practitioners to move toward value chain perspectives that situate actors in context, account for the many types of resources involved in co-creating AI systems, and integrate a wider range of ethical concerns across contexts and scales.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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