Following the recommendation of the United Nations Secretary-General, António Guterres, Professor Rita Orji has been formally appointed to the United Nations Independent International Scientific Panel on Artificial Intelligence, a high-level global body established to guide international understanding and governance of artificial intelligence.
Her appointment places her among only 40 experts selected worldwide and makes her the sole Nigerian on the panel, a distinction that underscores Nigeria’s growing intellectual presence in one of the most influential technological arenas of our time.
A Professor of Computer Science at Dalhousie University in Canada, Prof. Orji will serve a three-year term, contributing expertise in human-centred, equitable, and responsible AI.
A Nigerian scholar with a global footprint, she has built a career around ensuring that technological progress aligns with human values rather than overriding them. Her research focuses on how intelligent systems interact with behaviour, culture, and trust, particularly within diverse and underrepresented contexts.
As the Canada Research Chair in Persuasive Technology and Director of the Persuasive Computing Lab, she has led innovative work on AI-enabled systems for health, wellbeing, and social impact, grounded in ethical design and cultural sensitivity.
The Independent International Scientific Panel on AI was created in response to widespread recognition that the pace of AI development has outstripped existing mechanisms for oversight. Established by the United Nations in 2025, the panel serves as an independent scientific authority tasked with examining AI’s capabilities, limitations, and societal consequences, and with supporting informed global dialogue on how the technology should be governed in the public interest.
The competitiveness of Prof. Orji’s appointment further highlights its significance as her nomination emerged from a global pool of more than 2,600 highly qualified candidates, from which just 40 individuals were selected. The final panel reflects a deliberate balance of disciplines, regions, and perspectives, ensuring that guidance on AI governance is informed by a wide spectrum of scientific, social, and cultural insight.
AI technologies are increasingly deployed in societies that have limited influence over their design, often reinforcing existing inequalities and Prof. Orji’s work has consistently pushed back against this pattern, advocating for systems that are inclusive by design, culturally adaptive, and accountable to the people they affect. Through her role on the panel, perspectives shaped by lived realities beyond dominant tech hubs are brought directly into global AI governance discussions.
Prof. Orji is a Fellow of the African Academy of Sciences and the Royal Society of Canada, honours that reflect long-term international impact. She has received several of Canada’s most competitive research awards and fellowships, alongside numerous distinctions recognising innovation, leadership, and mentorship. Beyond formal honours, she is widely respected for advancing diversity and inclusion in science and technology, and for championing equitable access to digital opportunities.
Prof. Orji’s research is widely published and cited, shaping discourse across artificial intelligence, human-computer interaction, digital health, and ethics. She is regularly invited to contribute to policy initiatives, serve on strategic advisory bodies, and deliver keynote addresses at major international forums. Equally notable is her mentorship legacy, through which she has helped cultivate a new generation of researchers from diverse backgrounds, expanding global participation in AI scholarship.
The panel’s work will feed directly into the UN’s Global Dialogue on AI Governance, supporting governments as they confront complex questions around innovation, safety, ethics, and long-term societal impact.
Alongside Prof. Rita Orji of Nigeria, the other members appointed to the Independent International Scientific Panel on Artificial Intelligence are;
Adji Bousso Dieng (Senegal),
Aleksandra Korolova (Latvia),
Alvitta Ottley (Saint Kitts and Nevis),
Andrei Neznamov (Russian Federation),
Anna Korhonen (Finland),
Awa Bousso Dramé (Cabo Verde),
Balaraman Ravindran (India),
Bernhard Schölkopf (Germany),
Bilal Mateen (Pakistan),
Carlos Coello Coello (Mexico),
Girmaw Abebe Tadesse (Ethiopia),
Haitao Song (China),
Hoda Heidari (Islamic Republic of Iran),
Jian Wang (China),
Joëlle Barral (France),
Johanna Pirker (Austria),
Joyce Nakatumba Nabende (Uganda),
Juho Kim (Republic of Korea),
Leslie Teo (Singapore),
Lior Rokach (Israel),
Loreto Bravo (Chile),
Maria Ressa (Philippines),
Mark Coeckelbergh (Belgium),
Martha Palmer (United States of America),
Maximilian Nickel (Germany),
Melahat Bilge Demirköz (Türkiye),
Mennatallah El-Assady (Egypt),
Piotr Sankowski (Poland),
Qinghua Lu (Australia),
Román Orús (Spain),
Silvio Savarese (Italy),
Sonia Livingstone (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland),
Tegawendé Bissyandé (Burkina Faso),
Teresa Ludermir (Brazil),
Tuka Alhanai (United Arab Emirates),
Vipin Kumar (United States of America),
Vukosi Marivate (South Africa),
Yoshua Bengio (Canada),
Yutaka Matsuo (Japan).
As artificial intelligence continues to reshape societies and global power structures, Prof. Rita Orji’s appointment stands as a clear affirmation of Nigeria’s forward momentum. It reflects a country whose scholars are not merely adapting to the future, but actively helping to shape it.
For Nigeria, it is a moment of confidence and pride; for the world, it is a reminder that the most durable global solutions emerge when excellence from every region is recognised and empowered.