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Citation

AI and the Social Contract

Author:
Chung, Chee Hae; Schiff, Daniel S.
Publication:
Proceedings of the AAAI/ACM Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society
Year:
2025

As artificial intelligence (AI) systems increasingly shape public governance, they challenge foundational principles of political legitimacy. This paper evaluates AI governance against five canonical social contract theories—Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Rawls, and Nozick—while examining how structural features of AI strain these theories’ durability. Using a structured comparative framework, the study applies three forms of legitimacy (procedural, moral-substantive, and recognitional) and three types of consent (explicit, tacit, and hypothetical) as normative benchmarks. Applying each theory, the analysis finds AI governance is marked by deficits in accountability, participation, rights protection, fairness, and freedom from coercion, while AI’s opacity, global influence, and hybrid public-private control reveal blind spots within the social contract tradition itself. Though no single theory offers a complete solution and each contains specific weaknesses, the paper develops a hybrid model integrating Hobbesian accountability, Lockean rights protections, Rousseauian participation norms, Rawlsian fairness, and Nozickian safeguards against coercion. The paper concludes by distilling normative priorities for aligning governance with these hybrid contractarian standards: embedding participatory mechanisms, encouraging pluralistic ethical perspectives, ensuring institutional transparency, and strengthening democratic oversight. These interventions aim to reconfigure the social contract—and AI—for an era in which algorithmic systems increasingly mediate the exercise of political authority.