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AI and Assembly
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08 July 2025

Artificial intelligence has moved from the lab into everyday life and is now seemingly everywhere. As AI creeps into every aspect of our lives, the data grab required to power AI also expands. People worldwide are tracked, analyzed, and influenced, whether on or off their screens, inside their homes or outside in public, still or in transit, alone or together. What does this mean for our ability to assemble with others for collective action, including protesting, holding community meetings and organizing rallies ? In this context, where and how does assembly take place, and who participates by choice and who by coercion? AI and Assembly explores these questions and offers global perspectives on the present and future of assembly in a world taken over by AI.
The contributors analyze how AI threatens free assembly by clustering people without consent, amplifying social biases, and empowering authoritarian surveillance. But they also explore new forms of associational life that emerge in response to these harms, from communities in the US conducting algorithmic audits to human rights activists in East Africa calling for biometric data protection and rideshare drivers in London advocating for fair pay. Ultimately, AI and Assembly is a rallying cry for those committed to a digital future beyond the narrow horizon of corporate extraction and state surveillance.
Prologue: In Our Defense
—Tawana Petty
1. Introduction
—Toussaint Nothias and Lucy Bernholz
2. Illusions of Agency?
—Michael Hamilton
3. Algorithmic Violence
—Ashley Lee
4. From Threat to Advocacy
—Lisa Garbe, Daniel Mwesigwa, and Toussaint Nothias
5. Machine-Made
—Lucy Bernholz
6. A Tale of Two Audits
—Danaë Metaxa and Deborah Raji
7. Thinking Alternately, from Elsewhere
—Noopur Raval
Acknowledgments
About the Contributors
Index