AI for Good is unlocking AI’s potential to serve humanity.
AI for Good is organized by ITU in partnership with over 50 UN Sister Agencies and co-convened with the Government of Switzerland.
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Bringing stakeholders together to harness AI’s potential to solve global challenges.
Developing AI standards to create more opportunities for innovation and digital transformation worldwide.
Empowering people with the tools and knowledge to thrive in the AI era—nurturing the future wave of innovators.
Facilitating exchanges between key stakeholders on effective approaches to AI governance.
AI for Good is unlocking AI’s potential to serve humanity.
AI for Good is organized by ITU in partnership with over 50 UN partners and co-convened with the Government of Switzerland.
![]() |
![]() |
Bringing stakeholders together to harness AI’s potential to solve global challenges.
Developing AI standards to create more opportunities for innovation and digital transformation worldwide.
Empowering people with the tools and knowledge to thrive in the AI era—nurturing the future wave of innovators.
Facilitating exchanges between key stakeholders on effective approaches to AI governance.




Unlocking AI's potential to serve humanity.
7 - 10 July 2026 • 09:00 - 18:00

Doreen Bogdan-Martin took office as Secretary-General of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) on 1 January 2023. Ms Bogdan-Martin was elected as ITU’s first-ever female Secretary-General by Member States at the Union’s Plenipotentiary Conference in Bucharest, Romania.
Ms Bogdan-Martin was previously the Director of the ITU Telecommunication Development Bureau. She took office on 1 January 2019, becoming the first woman in ITU history to hold one of the organization’s top elected management positions.

Dr. Roman V. Yampolskiy is a tenured faculty member in the department of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Louisville. He is the founding and current director of the Cyber Security Lab and an author of many books including “AI: Unexplainable, Unpredictable, Uncontrollable”. Dr. Yampolskiy’s main area of interest is Artificial Intelligence Safety and Security.

Dr. Jian Wang is an Academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, Director of Zhejiang Lab, and Founder of Alibaba Cloud. The Cloud ranks third as a public cloud provider globally and first in Asia. He was also the chief architect of Apsara, its computing foundation, and took the lead in proposing the industrial model of using computing as a public service. In 2016, Dr. Wang pioneered and led the nonprofit City Brain initiative to develop a new digital infrastructure for sustainable “smart” cities as his personal effort and was the architect of Hangzhou City Brain. He founded the Yunqi Academy of Engineering, a private nonprofit research institute with a focus on scientific research for City Brain, and the Yunqi Science and Technology Innovation Foundation, a philanthropic private foundation that operates the free 2050 museum, which envisions the future through technology innovation and organizes the 2050 event every year in April, promoting the vision of science and technology bringing people together.
Jessica Sibley is the Chief Executive Officer of TIME.
As CEO, Sibley oversees the global media brand which includes TIME’s iconic magazine and digital platforms that reach the largest audience in its history of 120 million people worldwide; TIME Studios, the Emmy Award-winning film and television division and producer of award-winning branded content; a rapidly growing global live events business; TIME for Kids, which provides trusted news with a focus on news literacy for children; and more.
Since joining as CEO in 2022, Sibley has accelerated TIME’s digital transformation, expanded into new platforms, and revitalized the TIME brand overall—leading TIME to be named Media Brand of the Year by the Digiday Media Awards in 2024. She has diversified TIME’s revenue streams, launched new products, supercharged its global live events business, increased advertising revenue and meaningfully engaged new audiences, all while upholding TIME’s vision of covering leaders who shape the world and providing trusted guidance to its global audiences.
Prior to joining TIME, Sibley was the Chief Operating Officer of Forbes, where she led all revenue and growth initiatives for the world’s largest business media brand and achieved five consecutive years of growth from 2018 to 2022. Previously, Sibley held senior leadership positions at The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, and Condé Nast.

Stuart Russell received his B.A. with first-class honours in physics from Oxford University in 1982 and his Ph.D. in computer science from Stanford in 1986. He then joined the faculty of the University of California at Berkeley, where he is Professor (and formerly Chair) of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences and holder of the Smith-Zadeh Chair in Engineering. He is also an Adjunct Professor of Neurological Surgery at UC San Francisco and Vice-Chair of the World Economic Forum’s Council on AI and Robotics.
Russell is a recipient of the Presidential Young Investigator Award of the National Science Foundation, the IJCAI Computers and Thought Award, the World Technology Award (Policy category), the Mitchell Prize of the American Statistical Association and the International Society for Bayesian Analysis, the ACM Karlstrom Outstanding Educator Award, and the AAAI/EAAI Outstanding Educator Award. In 1998, he gave the Forsythe Memorial Lectures at Stanford University and from 2012 to 2014 he held the Chaire Blaise Pascal in Paris. He is a Fellow of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence, the Association for Computing Machinery, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
His research covers a wide range of topics in artificial intelligence including machine learning, probabilistic reasoning, knowledge representation, planning, real-time decision making, multitarget tracking, computer vision, computational physiology, global seismic monitoring, and philosophical foundations. His books include “The Use of Knowledge in Analogy and Induction”, “Do the Right Thing: Studies in Limited Rationality” (with Eric Wefald), and “Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach” (with Peter Norvig). His current concerns include the threat of autonomous weapons and the long-term future of artificial intelligence and its relation to humanity.

Dr. Sasha Luccioni is a leading scientist at the nexus of artificial intelligence, ethics, and sustainability, with a PhD in AI and a decade of research and industry expertise. She is the Climate Lead at Hugging Face, a global startup in responsible open-source AI, where she spearheads research, consulting and capacity-building to elevate the sustainability of AI systems. A founding member of Climate Change AI (CCAI) and a board member of Women in Machine Learning (WiML), Sasha is passionate about catalyzing impactful change, organizing events and serving as a mentor to under-represented minorities within the AI community. In 2024, Dr. Luccioni’s work was recognized by TIME Magazine’s 100 most influential people in AI and by Business Insider on its 2024 AI Power List.

Udbhav Tiwari is the VP for Strategy and Global Affairs at Signal. Udbhav’s experience in the technology sector spans both global and regional contexts, where he was formerly the Director for Global Product Policy at Mozilla, with prior roles at Google and the Centre for Internet and Society in India. He has testified before the U.S Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation and been quoted as an expert by CNN, The Guardian, Wired, Financial Times, BBC, and Reuters. Udbhav was previously affiliated with the Carnegie Endowment for Peace and was named to India Today’s “India Tomorrow” list in 2020.

Nicholas Thompson is the CEO of The Atlantic, a position he has held since 2021. During that time, the publication has won three National Magazine Awards for General Excellence, three Pulitzer Prizes, and been named Digiday’s Publisher of the Year. It has grown revenue by 84%, while reaching the highest level of subscribers in its 166-year history. Thompson is also the former editor-in-chief of WIRED, where he built successful subscription and aRiliate revenue businesses. While at WIRED he also wrote and edited multiple stories that were cited in front of Congress and one that was turned into an Academy Award winning film. Another of his stories was recently turned into the second highest grossing documentary of all time on HBO Max.
Thompson is a former contributor for CBS News and a cofounder of The Atavist, a multimedia CMS that was sold to WordPress, and Speakeasy.ai, which was sold to Amplica Labs. He previously served as editor of NewYorker.com. He is a life member at the Council on Foreign Relations, a board member at The National Committee on American Foreign Policy, the author of “The Hawk and the Dove: Paul Nitze, George Kennan, and the History of the Cold War,” and a former contributor to CNN and CBS News. He films a daily video on tech policy for Linkedin and has roughly two million followers across social media platforms. Thompson has long been a competitive runner; in 2021, he set the American record for men 45+ in the 50K race. He is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Stanford where he earned degrees in Earth Systems, Political Science, and Economics.

Tomas Lamanauskas is Deputy Secretary-General of the International Telecommunication Union, elected at the ITU Plenipotentiary Conference of 2022, and taking up duties as of January 2023.
His 25 years of experience spans across sectors of telecoms and digital policy, regulation and strategy, stemming from executive level positions in agencies, companies, and organizations across Europe, the Middle East, the Caribbean and the Pacific region.
As Deputy Secretary-General of ITU, Tomas focuses on the financial sustainability and operational excellence of the organization. He also works to raise the digital industry’s ambition in fighting the climate crisis through the Green Digital Action initiative and promotes investments into the digital infrastructure as well as digital resilience through the Digital Infrastructure Investment Initiative and other efforts. Additionally, Tomas contributes to the global efforts to harness the opportunities and mitigate challenges of new technologies, in particular Artificial Intelligence, including through his role as a co-chair of the United Nations Inter-Agency Working Group on AI. He is also playing a key role in ensuring ITU’s support to other UN-wide development and governance efforts, including through the World Summit of the Information Society process and membership at the Operational Steering Committee of the UN Joint SDG Fund.
Tomas holds Master’s Degrees in Public Administration (Harvard), Leadership and Strategy (London Business School), Telecommunications Regulation and Policy (The University of the West Indies) and Law (Vilnius University).

Kenneth Cukier is the deputy executive editor at The Economist, following two decades as a foreign correspondent, technology writer and commentary editor.
He is the coauthor of the bestselling book “Big Data” with Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, which was translated into 20 languages and sold 2m copies. His latest book is “Framers” on AI and mental models, with Viktor and Francis de Véricourt.
Kenn was a research fellow at Harvard’s Kennedy School and Oxford’s Saïd Business School. He previously served on the board of directors of International Bridges to Justice and Chatham House. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Emmy award-winning television journalist and coach Jane Hanson has spent over 30 years helping people learn to communicate better. Not only does it enhance their presence, and ensure they resonate with every type of audience, but in today’s fast paced world, it is imperative to be on one’s game 24/7. Hanson focuses on three core elements: what you say, how you say it, and how your body language keeps it all in sync.
Among her diverse array of media and presentation training clients: top tier leaders of corporations spanning the fields of finance, insurance, startups, technology, education, fashion and media; publishers and editors in chief of numerous national magazines; key opinion leaders in the pharmaceutical industry; politicians and world leaders, internet entrepreneurs; chefs and restaurateurs. She has also hosted programs on cable channels and private satellite broadcasts, covering nearly every subject, from healthcare to food to finance to religion. And she is a frequent speaker, emcee, host, and panel moderator. Events she has participated in range from the New York Emmys to Toys for Tots to the Race for the Cure to the Randall’s island Sports Foundation. She has hosted events for virtually every industry, many health care issues, dozens of schools and colleges, and many groups focusing on women and children. She is also a Forbes contributor and uses her experience working with executive leaders to offer her unique insight and expertise.
Jane Hanson grew up on the prairies of rural Minnesota, coming to New York three decades ago to join the NBC networks. She began as an anchor and correspondent for NBC New York in 1979. In 1988, Jane was named co-anchor of “Today in New York,” a position she held until 2003 when she became the station’s primary anchor for local programming and the host of “Jane’s New York”; She covered events ranging from the tragedy of 9/11 to the joy of Yankees victory parades to Wall Street and Washington; has interviewed presidents, business magnates, prisoners, and celebrities; traveled as far as the Gobi Desert of Mongolia and the great depths miles below New York City for her special reports. Most recently she hosted a daily entertainment and lifestyle program, New York Live, for NBC4 in New York City.
Jane has won 9 Emmy Awards. In addition, she was named Correspondent of the Year by New York’s Police Detectives and received a similar honor from New York’s Firefighters. She has also been the recipient of numerous other awards for her service to the community. Jane has served as the March of Dimes Walk-America Chairman, honorary chair for the Susan B. Komen Foundation’s Race for the Cure, and as a board member of Graham Windham, Phipps Houses, the Randall’s Island Sports Foundation, the Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center, and Telecare. She has taught courses on communication at Long Island University, Stern College, and the 92nd Street Y. Hanson is a Past President of the New York Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

Josh Parker joined NVIDIA in 2023 to lead the company’s corporate sustainability program. Josh studied electrical engineering and spent several years practicing IP law at a large law firm and later for the computer storage company Western Digital. While at Western Digital, he was asked to lead the company’s ethics and compliance program in Asia and later to build a new corporate sustainability program for the company. At NVIDIA, Josh is pursuing a data-driven approach to sustainability, believing that accurate and credible data is a prerequisite for effectively managing impacts. Josh is also deeply persuaded that technology—especially AI—can play a critical and dramatic role in solving world-scale sustainability challenges.
Secretary-General, United Nations
United Kingdom
Chair AI for Good Impact Initiative, Founder and CEO at AIE3
Co-Founder & Executive Director at Center for Humane Technology (CHT)
Secretary-General, International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
President, Republic of Estonia
Chair and CEO, Salesforce
For important information regarding the classification, please go to the Division’s website and review the last two questions in the Q&A page. Please be advised that the utilization of this list by AI for Good is exclusively for the purpose of ticketing for the 2024 AI for Good Global Summit, unless otherwise specified
| Country or Area | ISO-alpha2 Code | ISO-alpha3 Code | Developed / Developing regions |
| Algeria | DZ | DZA | Developing |
| Egypt | EG | EGY | Developing |
| Libya | LY | LBY | Developing |
| Morocco | MA | MAR | Developing |
| Sudan | SD | SDN | Developing |
| Tunisia | TN | TUN | Developing |
| Western Sahara | EH | ESH | Developing |
| British Indian Ocean Territory | IO | IOT | Developing |
| Burundi | BI | BDI | Developing |
| Comoros | KM | COM | Developing |
| Djibouti | DJ | DJI | Developing |
| Eritrea | ER | ERI | Developing |
| Ethiopia | ET | ETH | Developing |
| French Southern Territories | TF | ATF | Developing |
| Kenya | KE | KEN | Developing |
| Madagascar | MG | MDG | Developing |
| Malawi | MW | MWI | Developing |
| Mauritius | MU | MUS | Developing |
| Mayotte | YT | MYT | Developing |
| Mozambique | MZ | MOZ | Developing |
| Réunion | RE | REU | Developing |
| Rwanda | RW | RWA | Developing |
| Seychelles | SC | SYC | Developing |
| Somalia | SO | SOM | Developing |
| South Sudan | SS | SSD | Developing |
| Uganda | UG | UGA | Developing |
| United Republic of Tanzania | TZ | TZA | Developing |
| Zambia | ZM | ZMB | Developing |
| Zimbabwe | ZW | ZWE | Developing |
| Angola | AO | AGO | Developing |
| Cameroon | CM | CMR | Developing |
| Central African Republic | CF | CAF | Developing |
| Chad | TD | TCD | Developing |
| Congo | CG | COG | Developing |
| Democratic Republic of the Congo | CD | COD | Developing |
| Equatorial Guinea | GQ | GNQ | Developing |
| Gabon | GA | GAB | Developing |
| Sao Tome and Principe | ST | STP | Developing |
| Botswana | BW | BWA | Developing |
| Eswatini | SZ | SWZ | Developing |
| Lesotho | LS | LSO | Developing |
| Namibia | NA | NAM | Developing |
| South Africa | ZA | ZAF | Developing |
| Benin | BJ | BEN | Developing |
| Burkina Faso | BF | BFA | Developing |
| Cabo Verde | CV | CPV | Developing |
| Côte d’Ivoire | CI | CIV | Developing |
| Gambia | GM | GMB | Developing |
| Ghana | GH | GHA | Developing |
| Guinea | GN | GIN | Developing |
| Guinea-Bissau | GW | GNB | Developing |
| Liberia | LR | LBR | Developing |
| Mali | ML | MLI | Developing |
| Mauritania | MR | MRT | Developing |
| Niger | NE | NER | Developing |
| Nigeria | NG | NGA | Developing |
| Saint Helena | SH | SHN | Developing |
| Senegal | SN | SEN | Developing |
| Sierra Leone | SL | SLE | Developing |
| Togo | TG | TGO | Developing |
| Anguilla | AI | AIA | Developing |
| Antigua and Barbuda | AG | ATG | Developing |
| Aruba | AW | ABW | Developing |
| Bahamas | BS | BHS | Developing |
| Barbados | BB | BRB | Developing |
| Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba | BQ | BES | Developing |
| British Virgin Islands | VG | VGB | Developing |
| Cayman Islands | KY | CYM | Developing |
| Cuba | CU | CUB | Developing |
| Curaçao | CW | CUW | Developing |
| Dominica | DM | DMA | Developing |
| Dominican Republic | DO | DOM | Developing |
| Grenada | GD | GRD | Developing |
| Guadeloupe | GP | GLP | Developing |
| Haiti | HT | HTI | Developing |
| Jamaica | JM | JAM | Developing |
| Martinique | MQ | MTQ | Developing |
| Montserrat | MS | MSR | Developing |
| Puerto Rico | PR | PRI | Developing |
| Saint Barthélemy | BL | BLM | Developing |
| Saint Kitts and Nevis | KN | KNA | Developing |
| Saint Lucia | LC | LCA | Developing |
| Saint Martin (French Part) | MF | MAF | Developing |
| Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | VC | VCT | Developing |
| Sint Maarten (Dutch part) | SX | SXM | Developing |
| Trinidad and Tobago | TT | TTO | Developing |
| Turks and Caicos Islands | TC | TCA | Developing |
| United States Virgin Islands | VI | VIR | Developing |
| Belize | BZ | BLZ | Developing |
| Costa Rica | CR | CRI | Developing |
| El Salvador | SV | SLV | Developing |
| Guatemala | GT | GTM | Developing |
| Honduras | HN | HND | Developing |
| Mexico | MX | MEX | Developing |
| Nicaragua | NI | NIC | Developing |
| Panama | PA | PAN | Developing |
| Argentina | AR | ARG | Developing |
| Bolivia (Plurinational State of) | BO | BOL | Developing |
| Bouvet Island | BV | BVT | Developing |
| Brazil | BR | BRA | Developing |
| Chile | CL | CHL | Developing |
| Colombia | CO | COL | Developing |
| Ecuador | EC | ECU | Developing |
| Falkland Islands (Malvinas) | FK | FLK | Developing |
| French Guiana | GF | GUF | Developing |
| Guyana | GY | GUY | Developing |
| Paraguay | PY | PRY | Developing |
| Peru | PE | PER | Developing |
| South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands | GS | SGS | Developing |
| Suriname | SR | SUR | Developing |
| Uruguay | UY | URY | Developing |
| Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of) | VE | VEN | Developing |
| Kazakhstan | KZ | KAZ | Developing |
| Kyrgyzstan | KG | KGZ | Developing |
| Tajikistan | TJ | TJK | Developing |
| Turkmenistan | TM | TKM | Developing |
| Uzbekistan | UZ | UZB | Developing |
| China | CN | CHN | Developing |
| China, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region | HK | HKG | Developing |
| China, Macao Special Administrative Region | MO | MAC | Developing |
| Democratic People’s Republic of Korea | KP | PRK | Developing |
| Mongolia | MN | MNG | Developing |
| Brunei Darussalam | BN | BRN | Developing |
| Cambodia | KH | KHM | Developing |
| Indonesia | ID | IDN | Developing |
| Lao People’s Democratic Republic | LA | LAO | Developing |
| Malaysia | MY | MYS | Developing |
| Myanmar | MM | MMR | Developing |
| Philippines | PH | PHL | Developing |
| Singapore | SG | SGP | Developing |
| Thailand | TH | THA | Developing |
| Timor-Leste | TL | TLS | Developing |
| Viet Nam | VN | VNM | Developing |
| Afghanistan | AF | AFG | Developing |
| Bangladesh | BD | BGD | Developing |
| Bhutan | BT | BTN | Developing |
| India | IN | IND | Developing |
| Iran (Islamic Republic of) | IR | IRN | Developing |
| Maldives | MV | MDV | Developing |
| Nepal | NP | NPL | Developing |
| Pakistan | PK | PAK | Developing |
| Sri Lanka | LK | LKA | Developing |
| Armenia | AM | ARM | Developing |
| Azerbaijan | AZ | AZE | Developing |
| Bahrain | BH | BHR | Developing |
| Georgia | GE | GEO | Developing |
| Iraq | IQ | IRQ | Developing |
| Jordan | JO | JOR | Developing |
| Kuwait | KW | KWT | Developing |
| Lebanon | LB | LBN | Developing |
| Oman | OM | OMN | Developing |
| Qatar | QA | QAT | Developing |
| Saudi Arabia | SA | SAU | Developing |
| State of Palestine | PS | PSE | Developing |
| Syrian Arab Republic | SY | SYR | Developing |
| Turkey | TR | TUR | Developing |
| United Arab Emirates | AE | ARE | Developing |
| Yemen | YE | YEM | Developing |
| Fiji | FJ | FJI | Developing |
| New Caledonia | NC | NCL | Developing |
| Papua New Guinea | PG | PNG | Developing |
| Solomon Islands | SB | SLB | Developing |
| Vanuatu | VU | VUT | Developing |
| Guam | GU | GUM | Developing |
| Kiribati | KI | KIR | Developing |
| Marshall Islands | MH | MHL | Developing |
| Micronesia (Federated States of) | FM | FSM | Developing |
| Nauru | NR | NRU | Developing |
| Northern Mariana Islands | MP | MNP | Developing |
| Palau | PW | PLW | Developing |
| United States Minor Outlying Islands | UM | UMI | Developing |
| American Samoa | AS | ASM | Developing |
| Cook Islands | CK | COK | Developing |
| French Polynesia | PF | PYF | Developing |
| Niue | NU | NIU | Developing |
| Pitcairn | PN | PCN | Developing |
| Samoa | WS | WSM | Developing |
| Tokelau | TK | TKL | Developing |
| Tonga | TO | TON | Developing |
| Tuvalu | TV | TUV | Developing |
| Wallis and Futuna Islands | WF | WLF | Developing |
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