Chinenye Egbuna Ikwuemesi is a writer, author and systems thinker examining power, infrastructure and the myths that legitimise harm, with a focus on Africa as the first quarry for logics later applied to everyone.
Facial recognition has led to the wrongful jailing of a Tennessee grandmother, scanned 2.5 million faces & wrong algorithm in Essex. 50 van rollout across England and Wales. On who it archive was built to watch, why biometric risk management & AI governance frameworks.
As the UK parliamentary inquiry, the EU AI Act, and 52 US state bills converge on AI in education, one question remains unasked: whose knowledge did the archive exclude before the system was trained? On algorithmic bias, decolonising AI, and what archive correction requires.
The UN asked the world to name the gravest crime against humanity, and exposed the limits of the equality the world governance system claims to uphold, and the limits of equal recognition in a system that still cannot fully reckon with its own foundations.
Unpacks the Myth of Neutrality, arguing that so‑called impartial systems encode institutional priorities while presenting their decisions as technical facts.