Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Psychology departments published a research entitled: Human rights threats to girls and women of emerging, advanced, technologies: Implications for legislation, policy-making, technology design and development.

The research calls for the importance of studying the consequences of legislation for Girls and women rights, It’s a part of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities, psychology department aim to raise awareness and a call for equality.
The last few decades have seen a remarkable increase in the accessibility and capabilities of technologies using artificial intelligence , and those technologies mixing of augmented and virtual reality . But whilst these emerging and advanced technologies provide new and important spaces for the discussion of human rights, and collective challenges and resistance to the structures and individuals who perpetuate these such as in the #BlackLivesMatter and #MeToo digital social movements , they also provide fertile spaces for a range of human rights violations, which may impede these . In this research it’s drawn on our empirical quantitative research in emerging, advanced technologies and qualitative research on digital gender-sexual violations , to explore the ways in which AI driven technologies have been used in gender-sexual violations such as deep fake pornography, cyberstalking, trolling, and reputation abuse , and the future implications if, or when, AI is merged with other technologies (e.g., synthetic reality and robotics). The implications and recommendations for the promotion of human rights legislations, recommendations, and interventions for technology designers and developers, technology users, law enforcement, policy-makers, legislators, are discussed.