Published on: November 18, 2025

UNESCO ISSUES FIRST GLOBAL ETHICAL GUIDELINES FOR NEUROTECHNOLOGY

UNESCO ISSUES FIRST GLOBAL ETHICAL GUIDELINES FOR NEUROTECHNOLOGY

NEWSNeurotechnology refers to devices or procedures that access, monitor, or act on the brain and neural systems. With rapid advances such as AI-driven brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), UNESCO has released the first global ethical framework to regulate this emerging field.

HIGHLIGHTS

Why Guidelines Were Needed

  • Rising misuse concerns:
    • Using brain data for political persuasion
    • Profiling individuals for insurance or employment
    • Commercial exploitation of neural signals
  • Increasing investments:
    • Public: $6 billion
    • Private: $7.3 billion (2020)
  • Growth in medical and enhancement applications (e.g., tumour detection, speech restoration implants).

Key Features of UNESCO’s Framework (2024)

  1. Purpose of the Framework
  • Protect human rights and dignity
  • Promote responsible research and innovation (RRI)
  • Prevent misuse of neurodata
  1. Core Ethical Principles
  • Beneficence & No Harm
  • Autonomy & Freedom of Thought
  • Mental Privacy & Integrity
  • Non-discrimination & Inclusivity
  • Transparency, Trustworthiness & Accountability
  • Protection of vulnerable groups (children, elderly)
  • Safeguarding future generations
  1. Prohibited Practices
  • Manipulative use of brain data in:
    • Political messaging
    • Commercial marketing
    • Medical decision-making
  • Compelled neurodata tests for employment or insurance

Implementation Strategy

  • Clear definitions of neurotechnology and neurodata
  • Sector-specific guidance (health, education, research)
  • Emphasis on informed consent and user autonomy
  • Encouragement for:
    • Open science models → free sharing of data, tools, methods
    • Ethics-by-design in private companies
  • Balanced approach to intellectual property (IP):
    • Incentivise innovation
    • Prevent commodification of the human body

Global Implications

  • Supports creation of neurorights (mental privacy, integrity, liberty)
  • Builds on earlier standards by the OECD (2019)
  • Encourages innovation pluralism with strong ethical grounding
  • Aims to ensure neurotechnology develops safely, equitably, and sustainably