Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Other News

Show all news items

Can public discourse impact AI regulation? Latest Research from PAIS' Kerem Öge

To what extent is AI regulation influenced by frames and discourse coalitions? To address this question, we use complex systems and framing theories to analyse public discourse on facial recognition in the European Union (EU) and the United States. Our discourse network analysis of statements between 2000 and 2022 shows that facial recognition has been framed as a legitimate solution for security issues by governments particularly after 9/11. However, these earlier frames have been increasingly contested, and the dominant discourse shifted from security to ethical concerns. As facial recognition became more intrusive, we observe a diffusion of human rights and privacy frames and an associated gradual desecuritisation of the debate in both cases. We argue that desecuritisation and frame diffusion structured which forms of regulation were perceived as feasible, necessary and legitimate, thereby challenging certain applications of AI surveillance. We also show that this shift in the discursive environment influenced the scope and ethos of US state-level facial recognition policies and EU legislation such as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the AI Act.

Read Kerem and Manuel's work online via https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/jcms.70078

Thu 14 May 2026, 15:06 | Tags: Staff Research

Let us know you agree to cookies