In 2027, Geneva will host the AI Summit at a pivotal moment in the global race to shape AI. Previous summits reflected the character of their hosts. Bletchley Park focused on existential risk, Seoul on innovation and security, Paris on economic and societal impact, and New Delhi on development and inclusion.
Switzerland now has the opportunity to define the next chapter by promoting a practical, balanced, and human-centred approach to AI.
At the heart of Switzerland’s potential contribution is a model built on innovation, governance, and subsidiarity. The country’s strong innovation culture favours grounded, low-hype solutions that address real needs, as illustrated by open-source initiatives such as the multilingual Apertus language model.
But Swiss thinking goes beyond technology alone, recognising that meaningful AI progress also requires advances in education, management, and disciplines such as law, philosophy, linguistics, and the arts.
On governance, Switzerland is well placed to encourage a pragmatic approach. Rather than creating entirely new rules, much of AI’s impact can be addressed through existing frameworks on trade, human rights, intellectual property, and security, provided they are effectively implemented.
As home to numerous international organisations, Geneva offers a natural venue for aligning AI with established global institutions. At the same time, Switzerland’s tradition of bottom-up policymaking ensures that citizens remain part of the conversation.
The principle of subsidiarity, which holds that decisions be made as close as possible to the people affected, adds another dimension. In an era when AI power is concentrated in a handful of global platforms, Switzerland can champion more distributed models that anchor AI development in local communities.
By linking technology to local knowledge, culture, and economic life, AI can become a tool that empowers citizens rather than centralising control.
Trust, institutions, and multilateral cooperation will also be central themes on the road to 2027. Public confidence in AI has been shaken by alarmist narratives and fears of job loss, disinformation, and monopolisation.
Switzerland’s high-trust political culture and lean but effective institutions provide a model for rebuilding confidence through transparency and accountability. Strengthening, rather than sidelining, international organisations and equipping them with AI tools to enhance participation and legitimacy could help ensure that global governance keeps pace with technological change.
Ultimately, the Geneva AI Summit has the potential to mark a shift from polarised debates about doom or blind acceleration towards a mature conversation about how AI can serve humanity in concrete ways. By combining innovation with ethical reflection, sovereignty with interdependence, and global cooperation with local empowerment, Switzerland could help set a steady and credible course for the next phase of AI transformation.
Diplo’s role
Diplo is positioning itself as an active contributor to the road to the 2027 Geneva AI Summit by combining research, training, and practical policy engagement. Drawing on decades of experience in internet governance and digital diplomacy, Diplo approaches AI not as an abstract technological race, but as a policy and societal challenge that requires informed, inclusive, and realistic responses.
Through its humAInism methodology, Diplo situates AI within a broader human context, linking technology with philosophy, sociology, law, and diplomacy to ensure that innovation remains anchored in human values.
Beyond analysis, Diplo focuses on capacity development. Its AI Apprenticeship model promotes learning-by-doing, enabling diplomats, civil society representatives, and professionals to build AI skills through hands-on engagement.
At the same time, Diplo monitors global AI policy developments through the Digital Watch Observatory and develops practical tools, such as AI-supported reporting and knowledge preservation systems, to strengthen institutional memory and multilateral processes.
In this way, Diplo aims not only to observe the AI transformation but to help shape it in a way that is informed, inclusive, and fit for the realities of global governance.
First AI Tuesday of the Month
As preparations for the 2027 Geneva AI Summit gather pace, engagement will be key. One practical way to join the conversation is through the ‘First AI Tuesday of the Month’ luncheon series. These informal networking and briefing sessions bring together diplomats, experts, and practitioners to explore three core AI vectors shaping Geneva today. Those vectors are the road to the AI Summit, evolving governance dynamics, and the latest technological developments.
The next session takes place on Tuesday at 13:00, offering participants an opportunity to exchange ideas, build connections, and contribute to a more informed and inclusive AI debate. By marking the first Tuesday of each month in their calendars, stakeholders can take an active step on the Road to Geneva 2027 and help shape a balanced and forward-looking AI agenda.
You can register for the session here.
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