Can artificial intelligence truly understand every society or is it amplifying inequality worldwide through hidden cultural assumptions?
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Dr Itoro Abraham is a researcher at Lancaster University whose work sits at the intersection of AI ethics, digital governance, and the political economy of emerging technologies in postcolonial societies. He holds a BSc in Information Technology and Business Information Systems from Middlesex University and an MSc in Business Intelligence and Social Media from Brunel University London. His research interrogates the ethical, social, and geopolitical implications of AI systems, with particular attention to data colonialism, platform power, human–machine autonomy, and the structural inequalities shaping digital innovation. He is especially interested in advancing equitable and context‑aware AI development for communities across the Global South

Dr Itoro Abraham is a researcher at Lancaster University whose work sits at the intersection of AI ethics, digital governance, and the political economy of emerging technologies in postcolonial societies. He holds a BSc in Information Technology and Business Information Systems from Middlesex University and an MSc in Business Intelligence and Social Media from Brunel University London. His research interrogates the ethical, social, and geopolitical implications of AI systems, with particular attention to data colonialism, platform power, human–machine autonomy, and the structural inequalities shaping digital innovation. He is especially interested in advancing equitable and context‑aware AI development for communities across the Global South
Can artificial intelligence truly understand every society or is it amplifying inequality worldwide through hidden cultural assumptions?