AI for All: A Civilizational call from New Delhi to the Digital World
July 19, 2026
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Home Bharat

AI for All: A Civilizational call from New Delhi to the Digital World

AI must not become an instrument of digital colonialism. The developing world cannot be reduced to a data mine while advanced economies monopolise value creation. Nor can AI governance be dictated solely by those who possess computational supremacy. India’s intervention seeks to ensure that the benefits of AI innovation are equitably distributed and that capacity building in the Global South becomes an integral part of global AI architecture

Adv Karan ThakurAdv Karan Thakur
Mar 1, 2026, 06:00 pm IST
in Bharat, World, Analysis, Technology, Sci & Tech
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“आ नो भद्राः क्रतवो यन्तु विश्वतः” Rigveda(Let noble thoughts come to us from every side). This Vedic invocation beautifully captures the spirit of the New Delhi Declaration-welcoming innovation from across the world, yet guiding it with wisdom, ethics and universal welfare. In the unfolding global debate on Artificial Intelligence, where power equations are being quietly rewritten in code and computation, India’s New Delhi Declaration stands out not as a routine diplomatic communiqué but as a civilizational assertion. Emerging from the deliberations of the(GPAI) in, the Declaration reflects an intellectual confidence that is uniquely Bharatiya, rooted in the timeless maxim of “Sarvajan Hitay, Sarvajan Sukhaya”.

At a time when sections of the world view AI primarily through the prism of strategic rivalry, commercial dominance or regulatory anxiety, Bharat has chosen to elevate the discourse to the level of ethical responsibility and shared destiny. Artificial Intelligence is no longer an abstract frontier technology. It is shaping military doctrines, influencing electoral ecosystems, restructuring labour markets, redefining creativity and recalibrating economic hierarchies. Those who control algorithms increasingly control influence. Those who command data increasingly command capital. In such a scenario, the risk of technological concentration is real. History bears testimony that every major technological leap from steam power to the semiconductor has initially empowered a select few before diffusing outward. The AI revolution, if left unchecked, could deepen this asymmetry on a scale far greater than before.

It is against this backdrop that the New Delhi Declaration acquires significance. It articulates a position that is at once pragmatic and philosophical: that AI must not become an instrument of digital colonialism. The developing world cannot be reduced to a data mine while advanced economies monopolise value creation. Nor can AI governance be dictated solely by those who possess computational supremacy. India’s intervention seeks to ensure that the benefits of AI innovation are equitably distributed and that capacity building in the Global South becomes an integral part of global AI architecture.

This approach is not accidental. It flows from India’s own developmental journey. Over the past decade, initiatives such as have demonstrated that digital public infrastructure, when designed with inclusion at its core, can empower the last citizen in the queue. The Indian experience has shown that technology need not be elitist; it can be democratised. This lived success lends credibility to India’s call for human-centric AI– systems that augment human potential rather than displace it, tools that strengthen governance rather than erode accountability.

The New Delhi Declaration emphasises ethical guardrails, transparency and fairness. In an era where algorithmic bias can reinforce social prejudices and where generative AI can blur the line between fact and fabrication, safeguarding societal trust becomes imperative. Bharat’s position acknowledges innovation as essential, yet insists that innovation cannot be divorced from responsibility. The global AI discourse must therefore move beyond regulatory binaries between unrestrained market freedom and overbearing state control toward a balanced framework rooted in democratic oversight and human dignity.

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There is also a deeper strategic dimension. The world today is witnessing the emergence of competing technological blocs. AI, semiconductors, quantum computing and cybersecurity are increasingly woven into national security calculations. In this atmosphere of contestation, India’s emphasis on cooperation over confrontation is noteworthy. By leveraging multilateral platforms like GPAI, Bharat seeks consensus-building rather than camp politics. The Declaration subtly reinforces the Indian worldview of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam , that humanity’s technological future must be collaborative, not fragmented.

Data, the raw material of the AI age, presents another challenge. Questions of sovereignty, privacy, cross-border flows and equitable access are central to shaping the next decade of innovation. The New Delhi Declaration implicitly recognises that unless fair frameworks are developed, data asymmetry will translate into developmental asymmetry. India’s call for inclusive data ecosystems and digital public goods seeks to pre-empt such imbalances. It positions Bharat as a bridge, neither aligned blindly with technological maximalism nor resigned to technological dependency.

Crucially, the Declaration does not indulge in techno-utopianism. It acknowledges the disruptive potential of AI from workforce displacement to misinformation campaigns and calls for continuous dialogue among governments, industry, academia and civil society. Governance in the AI age cannot be static; it must evolve with agility. India’s approach suggests that ethical review mechanisms, adaptive regulatory frameworks and international cooperation are not obstacles to innovation but safeguards for its sustainability.

From a civilizational perspective, Bharat’s intervention is a reminder that technology divorced from moral anchoring can destabilise societies. India’s intellectual tradition has always harmonised material advancement with ethical restraint. The New Delhi Declaration carries that tradition into the digital century. It proposes that artificial intelligence must remain a servant of humanity, not its master. It insists that efficiency cannot override equity and that speed cannot eclipse justice.

In shaping this global conversation, India has signalled its readiness to move from being a rule-taker to a rule-shaper. The AI century will not merely be defined by processors and platforms, but by principles. Through the New Delhi Declaration, Bharat has placed its principles on the table inclusivity over exclusivity, cooperation over coercion, ethics over expediency. If the world heeds this call, AI can become a force multiplier for shared prosperity. If it does not, the consequences may be as disruptive as the technology itself.

“AI for All” is thus more than a diplomatic phrase. It is an ideological articulation of how Bharat views power in the 21st century not as dominance, but as responsibility. In giving this vision global voice, India has reaffirmed that its civilizational wisdom remains relevant even in an age driven by algorithms.

Topics: IndiaTechnologyGlobal SouthArtificial Intelligence(AI)AI Impact Summit
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