SU-AI03-2020

Human factors, and ethical, societal, legal and organisational aspects of using Artificial Intelligence in support of Law Enforcement -

⚫ indicates current topic
Node background color indicates the call topic status
Double click on a topic to center information around it.
Node size is proportional to distance from the current topic

About the connections

The graph above was generated based on the following links

  • ICT-26-2018-2020
    Artificial Intelligence

    MOTIVATION According to the Commission this series of topics are new, however they can be said to be linked to AI topics in ICT LEIT. In particular, the ICT-26-2018 topic was asked to develop a strategic research agenda.

  • Update link information
    Be aware that editing a link text will make it have to pass to quality control again before it will be publicly visible (unless you are an admin)
    Type
    Motivation NCP (only) comment

Call text (as on F&T portal)

View on F&T portal
Specific Challenge:

Advantages of AI are numerous. However, the lack of transparency of AI technologies and tools complicates their acceptance by users and citizens. Ethical and secure-by-design algorithms are necessary to build trust in this technology, but a broader engagement of civil society on the values to be embedded in AI and the directions for future development is crucial. This fact is generally correct, and it becomes extremely important in the security domain. Social engagement has to be part of the overall effort to fortify our resilience across institutions, civil society and industry, and at all levels - local, national, European. There is a need to find ways to build a human-centred and socially driven AI, by, amongst other, fostering the engagement of citizens and improving their perception of security. Possible side effects of AI technological solutions in the domain of security need to be considered carefully, both from the point of view of citizens and from the point of view of Law Enforcement: e.g., their concerns regarding a strong dependence on machines, risks involved, how AI will affect their jobs and their organisation, or how AI will affect their decisions. Many open aspects exist that can be a source both of concern and of opportunity and should be addressed in a comprehensive and thorough manner. Finally, the legal dimension should be tackled as well – e.g., how the use of data to train algorithms is dealt with, what is allowed and under which circumstances, what is forbidden and when.

Scope

Proposals under this topic should provide an exhaustive analysis of human, social and organisational aspects related to the use of AI tools, including gender related aspects, in support of Law Enforcement, both for cybersecurity and in the fight against crime, including cybercrime, and terrorism. Points of view and concerns of citizens as well as of Law Enforcement should be tackled. Based on this analysis, proposals should suggest approaches that are needed to overcome these concerns and that stimulate the acceptance of AI tools by civil society and by Law Enforcement. Proposals should lead to solutions developed in compliance with European societal values, fundamental rights and applicable legislation, including in the area of privacy, protection of personal data and free movement of persons. The societal dimension should be at the core of the proposed activities. Proposals should be submitted by consortia involving relevant security practitioners, civil society organisations as well as Social Sciences and Humanities experts.

As indicated in the Introduction of this call, proposals should foresee resources for clustering activities with other projects funded under this call to identify synergies and best practices.

The Commission considers that proposals requesting a contribution from the EU of around EUR 1.5 million would allow this specific challenge to be addressed appropriately. Nonetheless, this does not preclude submission and selection of proposals requesting other amounts.

Expected Impact:

Proposals should lead to:

Short term:

  • Effective contribution to the overall actions of this call.

Medium term:

  • Improved and consolidated knowledge among EU Law Enforcement Agency (LEA) officers on the issues addressed in this topic;
  • Exchange of experiences among EU LEAs about human, social and organisational aspects of the use of AI in their work;
  • Raised awareness of civil society about benefits of AI technologies in the security domain and opportunities it brings.

Longer term:

  • European common approach for assessing risks/threats involved by using AI in the security domain, and identifying and deploying relevant security measures that take into account legal and ethical rules of operation, fundamental rights such as the rights to privacy, to protection of personal data and free movement of persons;
  • Advances towards the implementation of the AI tools and technologies in support of Law Enforcement, in the areas of cybersecurity and fight against crime, including cybercrime, and terrorism, by strengthening the civil society perception of the EU as an area of freedom, justice and security.
Cross-cutting Priorities:

Socio-economic science and humanitiesGender

News flashes

2020-08-28

H2020-SU-AI-2018-2019-2020

A total of 23 proposals have been submitted in response to this call. The number of proposals for each topic is shown below including the indicative budget of the topics for 2020:

  • SU-AI01-2020(CSA) : 5 proposals (indicative budget: 1,5M€)
  • SU-AI02-2020(IA) : 5 proposals (indicative budget: 17M€)
  • SU-AI03-2020(CSA) : 13 proposals (indicative budget: 1,5M€)

The evaluation of the proposals will start by mid-September and will be closed by the end of the year. Applicants will be informed on the outcome of the evaluations in mid-January 2021.

2020-03-12
The submission session is now available for: SU-AI02-2020(IA), SU-AI01-2020(CSA), SU-AI03-2020(CSA)
call topic details
Call status: Closed
Publication date: 2017-10-27 (7 years ago)
Opening date: 2020-03-12 (5 years ago)
Closing date: 2020-08-27 (4 years ago)
Procedure: single-stage

Budget: 1500000
Expected grants: not specified
News flashes

This call topic has been appended 2 times by the EC with news.

  • 2020-08-28
    h2020-su-ai-2018-2019-2020a total of 23...
  • 2020-03-12
    the submission session is now available...
Call

H2020-SU-AI-2020

Call topics are often grouped together in a call. Sometimes this is for a thematic reason, but often it is also for practical reasons.

There are 2 other topics in this call:

Source information

Showing the latest information. Found 1 version of this call topic in the F&T portal.

Information from

  • 2024-03-30_20-36-55

Annotations (will be publicly visible when approved)

You must be logged in to add annotations
No annotations yet

Events

This is just a very first implementation, better visualisation coming

Events are added by the ideal-ist NCP community and are hand-picked. If you would like to suggest an event, please contact idealist@ffg.at.

Call topic timeline

What phase of the topic timeline are we in? This timeline contains some suggestions on what are realistic actions you should or could take at this moment. The timeline is based on the information provided by the call topic.
  1. Work programme available

    - 7 years ago

    The call topics are published first in the Work Programme, which is available a while before the call opens. By following up the Work Programme publications, you can get a headstart.

  2. Publication date

    - 7 years ago

    The call was published on the Funding & Tenders Portal.

  3. Opening date

    - 5 years ago

    The call opened for submissions.

  4. Closing date

    - 4 years ago

    Deadline for submitting a project.

  5. Time to inform applicants Estimate

    - 4 years ago

    The maximum time to inform applicants (TTI) of the outcome of the evaluation is five months from the call closure date.

  6. Sign grant agreement Estimate

    - 4 years ago

    The maximum time to sign grant agreements (TTG) is three months from the date of informing applicants.

  7. Today

Funded Projects

Loading...

Project information comes from CORDIS (for Horizon 2020 and Horizon Europe) and will be sourced from F&T Portal (for Digital Europe projects)

Bubbles

This call topic is part of: