UN launches global coalition to put children's rights at the Centre of AI Governance

Date: 2026-07-14
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By:   Nana Appiah Acquaye

A new United Nations-backed coalition has been launched to ensure that children's rights are embedded in the development and governance of artificial intelligence, bringing together governments, UN agencies, technology partners, civil society and education stakeholders around a common global framework.

The Coalition for Children's Rights and Protection in the Age of Artificial Intelligence was unveiled during the Global Dialogue on AI Governance in Geneva. The initiative brings together 17 countries, United Nations agencies and a broad range of partners, with its work anchored in the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the world's most widely ratified human rights treaty.

The coalition aims to promote an approach to AI governance that recognises children not only as users who require protection, but as rights holders whose perspectives should be considered in the design and deployment of AI systems that influence their education, development and everyday lives.

The United Nations Office for Digital and Emerging Technologies (ODET) is among the founding members of the coalition, reflecting the UN's broader efforts to advance responsible and inclusive artificial intelligence governance.

Speaking at the launch, United Nations Secretary-General's Envoy on Technology Amandeep Gill called for urgent global action to protect children in the age of AI, urging governments and stakeholders to work together to address emerging challenges.

The coalition follows the UN Secretary-General's call for an AI Child Safety Pledge and will focus on sharing evidence, best practices and policy approaches to strengthen child-centred AI governance across countries.

Organisers said the initiative also seeks to expand participation, particularly from countries in the Global South, ahead of the next Global Dialogue on AI Governance scheduled to take place in New York in May 2027.

 

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