The people team should be involved in the organisation’s AI governance discussions given the wide-ranging impact of AI on people. Regulatory compliance in AI governance is, however, typically in the remit of the legal, risk or compliance teams in large organisations. Colleagues outside these teams might not feel confident to challenge. Nor might they know how to deal with ethical issues like inclusion, fairness and safety.
You can lean on your existing knowledge of people, employment law and experience of developing policies to discuss AI governance pragmatically. By being aware of the letter and spirit of employment-related AI regulation, you can discuss pragmatic ways to comply. For example, the EU AI Act flags AI use in employment as ‘high risk’. However, by meeting certain criteria some high-risk use, such as shortlisting candidates, can be downgraded to limited risk. The EU AI Act compliance checker questionnaire is a useful tool for checking risk level.
Discussing AI governance also gives you the chance to engage with colleagues about your organisation’s approach to ethics in general. Suppose you’re discussing how to avoid discriminatory hiring in AI recruitment systems. First, you need to agree collectively what discriminatory hiring means and establish what is important to your organisation. Is the priority simply to avoid unlawful direct and indirect discrimination? Or does your organisation also want to create a more diverse workforce? Is it about legal compliance, business benefit or organisational values? Only when you’ve established the priorities can you discuss practical ways to avoid discriminatory hiring.