The rise of regional integration and South-South cooperation as an imperative in international relations and trade has been widely discussed, especially with the strengthening of BRICS+ (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa), and Pan-African movements. The idea of a world with multiple powers giving rise to diverse social and economic imperatives for technoscientific innovation is finding traction among scholars, including researchers in science and technology studies (STS), who hope this new order can challenge entrenched liberal epistemological and infrastructural hegemony, even though skepticism remains about actual challenges to asymmetries in global science and technology circulation. This paper offers an empirical contribution to the issues of South-South cooperation and multipolarity in the context of regional integration by examining artificial intelligence (AI) policy developments in Latin America. Analyzing the national AI strategies of seven Latin American countries, and engaging with contributions from dependency theorists, the research reveals how aspirations for Latin America to lead in AI innovation often replicate technology policy imperatives from the Global North. This contradictory dynamic perpetuates dependent development models and reinforces Latin America’s peripheral role in technological systems. The paper advocates for increased attention in STS research regarding the contradictions of South-South cooperation and multipolarity, particularly in contexts of economic and technological dependency.
Guilherme Cavalcante Silva (Thu,) studied this question.