Keeping humanity at the centre of the AI revolution


Keeping Humanity at the Centre of the AI Revolution

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Notes | GS-III / GS-IV | Science & Technology / Ethics


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2017 First calls for AI ethics frameworks; IEEE Global Initiative on Ethics of Autonomous Systems
2019 OECD Principles on AI — first intergovernmental standard on trustworthy AI [S2]
2021 UNESCO Recommendation on the Ethics of AI adopted by 193 countries — first global standard on AI ethics [S1]
2023 Bletchley Declaration on frontier AI safety (UK AI Safety Summit)
2024 UN General Assembly Resolution A/78/L.49 — first UN resolution on safe, secure, trustworthy AI
Nov 2025 India AI Governance Guidelines released by MeitY under IndiaAI Mission [S3]
Feb 2026 PM Modi's M.A.N.A.V. vision at India AI Impact Summit [S5]
Jun 2026 IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Amendment Rules 2026 regulate synthetically generated (deepfake) content [S3]

4. Core Static Facts

India-specific: - IndiaAI Mission: Cabinet-approved outlay of ₹10,372 crore (~₹10,300+ crore); covers compute, data, skilling, innovation, and governance pillars. [S3] - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY); mission anchored under IndiaAI. [S3] - India AI Governance Guidelines (Nov 2025) — structured around: - 7 Guiding Sutras (principles for ethical/responsible AI) - 6 Pillars of AI Governance (recommendations) - Short, medium, long-term Action Plan - New institutions established: AI Governance Group; Technology & Policy Expert Committee; AI Safety Institute (India). [S3] - High-risk AI systems: not permitted unrestricted deployment under the Guidelines; risk-based, evidence-led, proportional approach mandated. [S3] - IT Amendment Rules 2026: formal definition and regulation of synthetically generated content (deepfakes). [S3]

M.A.N.A.V. Framework (PM Modi, Feb 19, 2026): | Letter | Pillar | |--------|--------| | M | Moral and Ethical Systems | | A | Accountable Governance | | N | National Sovereignty | | A | Inclusive Development (Antyodaya) | | V | Viability through Trust |

Global: - UNESCO Recommendation on Ethics of AI (2021): adopted by 193 member states; first-ever global standard. [S1] - Readiness Assessment Methodology (RAM): UNESCO tool; over 75 countries across 5 continents have initiated/completed RAM assessments as of October 2025. [S1] - Global Civil Society & Academic Network on AI Ethics: launched June 2025 at 3rd Global Forum on Ethics of AI, Thailand. [S1] - MeitY–UNESCO Multi-Stakeholder Consultation on Safety and Ethics in AI: hosted jointly (PIB, 2024). [S6]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Scientific / Technological

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. 193 countries adopted the UNESCO Recommendation on the Ethics of AI in 2021 — first global AI ethics standard. [S1]
  2. The 4th UNESCO Global Forum on the Ethics of AI (2026) will be held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, co-hosted with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. [S1]
  3. UNESCO's Readiness Assessment Methodology (RAM) has been initiated or completed by over 75 countries from 5 continents as of October 2025. [S1]
  4. IndiaAI Mission was approved with an outlay of over ₹10,372 crore (commonly cited as ₹10,300+ crore). [S3]
  5. India AI Governance Guidelines (Nov 2025) are structured around 7 Guiding Sutras and 6 Pillars — released by MeitY (not NITI Aayog). [S3]
  6. Three new institutions under India's AI governance architecture: AI Governance Group, Technology & Policy Expert Committee, and AI Safety Institute. [S3]
  7. M.A.N.A.V. stands for: Moral & Ethical Systems, Accountable Governance, National Sovereignty, Antyodaya (Inclusive Development), Viability through Trust — announced February 19, 2026. [S5]
  8. India's AI Governance Guidelines adopt a risk-based, evidence-led, proportional approach — high-risk AI systems are not allowed unrestricted deployment. [S3]
  9. The IT Amendment Rules 2026 (not the IT Act itself) formally define and regulate synthetically generated content (deepfakes) in India. [S3]
  10. The UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance (Jul 2026, Geneva) is co-organised by UNESCO and the ITU — not the UN General Assembly alone. [S1]
  11. The OECD Principles on AI (2019) were the first intergovernmental standard on trustworthy AI — predating the UNESCO Recommendation by two years. [S2]
  12. MeitY and UNESCO jointly hosted a Multi-Stakeholder Consultation on Safety and Ethics in AI in India (2024). [S6]

8. Mains Relevance

Paper Specific Syllabus Heading
GS-III Science and Technology — developments and their applications; awareness in the fields of IT, Space, Computers, robotics; indigenization of technology
GS-III Digital Economy; Intellectual Property Rights
GS-IV Ethics and Human Interface; accountability and ethical governance; role of technology in society
Essay Technology and humanity; digital divide; ethics in public life

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Artificial Intelligence promises transformative benefits but poses existential risks to human dignity and agency. Critically examine India's regulatory response and suggest a framework that keeps humanity at the centre of the AI revolution." (GS-III / GS-IV, 15 marks) 2. "The UNESCO Recommendation on the Ethics of AI (2021) represents an important milestone in global governance, yet remains non-binding. Analyse its significance and limitations in the context of India's AI governance strategy." (GS-II / GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "'AI should be an extension of human aspiration, not a replacement for human judgment.' Evaluate PM Modi's M.A.N.A.V. vision in the light of India's developmental priorities and constitutional values." (GS-IV / Essay)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
IndiaAI Mission Direct policy vehicle for implementing human-centric AI in India
Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 Legal backbone for data rights — essential companion to AI governance
UNESCO Recommendation on Ethics of AI The primary global normative framework underpinning all discussions
EU AI Act, 2024 First binding AI legislation globally — contrast with India's guideline-based approach
Deepfakes & IT Amendment Rules 2026 Specific legal intervention at the intersection of AI and information integrity
Algorithmic Bias & Social Justice Ethical dimension — connects GS-IV ethics with GS-I social issues
OECD Principles on AI First intergovernmental standard; foundational for comparative governance
Bletchley Declaration (2023) Frontier AI safety — international cooperation precedent

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. MeitY vs. NITI Aayog: India AI Governance Guidelines and IndiaAI Mission are under MeitY, not NITI Aayog (though NITI Aayog published earlier strategy papers). Confusing the two is a common mistake.
  2. UNESCO Recommendation (2021) is non-binding: It is a recommendation, not a treaty or convention. Do not treat it as legally enforceable international law.
  3. India has no standalone AI Act: India's current framework (Nov 2025 Guidelines) is principle-based and non-binding — unlike the EU AI Act which is a regulation. Aspirants often conflate guidelines with legislation.
  4. M.A.N.A.V. date: Announced February 19, 2026 at the India AI Impact Summit — not at any UN forum or G20 meeting.
  5. RAM = Readiness Assessment Methodology (UNESCO): Sometimes confused with RAM (Random Access Memory in tech context) or other government schemes. In AI governance, RAM is UNESCO's diagnostic tool for member states.

11. Sources