Artificial Intelligence:
Future Perspectives

July 29 and 30

A multidisciplinary approach to the political, ethical, and legal impact of AI

Artificial intelligence is not solely a technological issue. Its effects extend to the political, legal, economic, and social spheres, even impacting our self-perception. What was once the realm of speculation is now part of everyday life, influencing decisions related to employment, justice, healthcare, education, and access to information. From this perspective, a multidisciplinary approach will be used to examine the real impact of these systems on human rights and democratic governance, building bridges between those who design them, those who regulate them, and those who are responsible for their oversight. 

AI systems are not neutral: they learn from the data they receive, reproduce the biases it contains, and concentrate ever-increasing decision-making power in the hands of those who develop and deploy them. Therefore, the crucial questions are not merely technical, but profoundly democratic: who is held accountable when an algorithm errs, how is transparency ensured in increasingly opaque processes, and how is individual autonomy protected against systems designed to anticipate and guide decisions?. 

The democratization of AI is not just an opportunity. It is also a crossroads: the decisions made, or omitted, will have direct consequences for fundamental rights and for the kind of society we want to build and guarantee for future generations. This course aims to move from vague concerns to informed judgment, offering technical, legal, and ethical insights to understand what is truly at stake and to participate knowledgeably in a debate that affects us all. 

The course is taught in person or can be followed live online.

Course program:
Revitalizing democracy
and human rights

Lecture: A Conceptual Introduction to Artificial Intelligence

Revitalization of democracy and human rights
Wednesday, July 29, 2026 |
10:00 - 11:15
Santo Domingo Convent, Chapter House
Óscar Cordón García. Professor of Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence at the University of Granada and founding director of the Virtual Learning Center at this University

Conference. Ethics and regulation in intelligent algorithms and their implementation in Spain

Revitalization of democracy and human rights
Wednesday, July 29, 2026 |
11:45 - 13:00
Santo Domingo Convent, Chapter House
Idoia Salazar. President of the Observatory of Social and Ethical Impact of AI (OdiseIA). Professor at the Faculty of Communication of the CEU San Pablo University.

Panel discussion: Artificial Intelligence and future perspectives

Revitalization of democracy and human rights
Wednesday, July 29, 2026 |
13:00 - 14:15
Santo Domingo Convent, Chapter House
This panel features prominent university researchers on AI, moderated by Juan Albino Méndez, Professor of Systems Engineering and Automation at the University of La Laguna.

Conference. European and Spanish regulation of artificial intelligence

Revitalization of democracy and human rights
Thursday, July 30, 2026 |
10:00 - 11:15
Teatro Leal
Moisés Barrio Andrés. Professor of Digital Law at Carlos III University of Madrid. International advisor on regulation, consultant and Legal Counsel to the Council of State.