Contact Support the Institute
Ethics of AI & the Life Sciences Hong Kong Institute
Independent · Non-profit · In the public interest

Ensuring AI and the life sciences serve the dignity and wellbeing of all.

We are an independent, non-profit research institute advancing rigorous, public-interest scholarship on the ethics and governance of artificial intelligence and the life sciences.

About the Institute

An independent voice for the public interest

Based in Hong Kong. Founded 2026.

The Hong Kong Institute for the Ethics of AI and the Life Sciences is an independent, non-profit research think tank. We conduct interdisciplinary research, policy analysis and public education on the ethical, legal and societal implications of artificial intelligence and the life sciences.

AI and the life sciences are reshaping how we work, learn, receive care and exercise our rights. These technologies hold great promise — yet they also raise urgent questions of safety, fairness, accountability and human dignity that markets alone will not answer. We exist to serve the public interest: to provide independent evidence, to give voice to those affected, and to help society make informed, responsible choices.

01

Independent

Not owned or controlled by any commercial or political interest.

02

Non-profit

All income and assets applied solely to our public-interest mission.

03

Interdisciplinary

Bridging law, philosophy, medicine, the sciences and public policy.

Research

Our research priorities

Six priorities, each chosen for its public significance.

Safe & Trustworthy AI

Assessing the risks of advanced AI systems so that innovation does not outpace safety.

Fairness & Justice

Examining algorithmic bias and discrimination to protect equal treatment.

Protecting the Vulnerable

Studying AI's impact on children, workers and human dignity.

Health & Life-Sciences Ethics

Promoting the responsible use of AI and biotechnology in medicine.

Public Ethics Literacy

Equipping citizens, students and professionals to understand and question these technologies.

Evidence for Policy

Independent analysis to inform regulators and lawmakers in the public interest.

Commentary & Analysis

Latest from the Institute

Op-eds, policy briefs and research notes.
Governance

Governing frontier AI models in the public interest

What meaningful oversight of the most capable AI systems could look like, and why it cannot wait.

Policy Brief · Forthcoming
Fairness

When algorithms decide: fairness in automated systems

How automated decision-making affects access to credit, employment and essential services.

Research Note · Forthcoming
Life Sciences

Ethics at the frontier of AI and medicine

Safeguarding patients and trust as AI enters diagnosis, treatment and biomedical research.

Essay · Forthcoming

Illustrative — the Institute's publications will appear here following its launch.

Our People

Scholarship at our core

A community of fellows, advisors and partners across disciplines.
D

Director

Office of the Director
To be announced
F

Senior Fellows

Research Leadership
Law · Philosophy · Medicine
R

Research Fellows

AI & Society
Cross-disciplinary
A

Advisory Council

Academia · Industry · Public
In formation
Events

Convening public dialogue

Conferences, public lectures and ethics-literacy programmes.
July
15
2026

Inauguration Ceremony & Symposium

The formal launch of the Institute, with a symposium on the ethics and governance of AI and the life sciences.

The University of Hong Kong · Mid-July 2026
Register interest
Our Commitments

Accountable to the public

The principles that govern how we work.
01

Non-profit by constitution

All income and assets serve our mission. No profits are distributed; on winding up, assets pass to another non-profit.

02

Independent & objective

We safeguard our academic freedom and the independence of our research, analysis and publications.

03

Open knowledge

Wherever possible, our research and educational materials are made freely available to the public.

04

Inclusive dialogue

We convene academia, industry, regulators and civil society so diverse voices shape decisions.