The University, a member of the advisor forum on artificial intelligence
The European Commission has selected Professor Dulce Redín to represent the institution; she is one of 174 individuals chosen from among more than 700 candidates
Photo: ManuelCastells/Dulce Redín is a professor at the School of Science Business and a researcher at DATAI
08 | 06 | 2026
The University of Navarra will be part of the AI Act Advisory Forum, the advisory body established under the European Artificial Intelligence Regulation. The European Commission has appointed Dulce Redín, a professor at the School of Science Business and a researcher at the Institute of data Science data Artificial Intelligence (DATAI), as the institution’s representative. She specializes in the ethical and social dimensions of artificial intelligence.
"For the University, being part of this body represents recognition of its track record in artificial intelligence research and anopportunity to contribute, from an academic perspective, to the implementation of framework European framework in this field,"explains Dulce Redín.
As a member of the forum, the academic center will participate in plenary meetings, work groups, and other enquiry advisory activities. Drawing on its profile , it will contribute knowledge in areas such as AI governance, AI ethics, AI literacy, and the analysis of the organizational and social implications of AI. “This participation will allow us to collaborate with universities, research centers, companies, and European institutions that are helping to shape the future of artificial intelligence in Europe, incorporating a people-centered approach and focusing on the impact of these technologies on organizations and society,” concludes Redín.
The AI Act Advisory Forum is an advisor body advisor the European Commission and the committee (AI Board), providing knowledge and technical advice to support the implementation of the European AI Act. It complements the work of the Scientific Panel of Independent Experts, which advises the Commission and, upon application, national market surveillance authorities on general-purpose AI.
The University is one of 174 organizations selected from more than 700 applications submitted by the academic community, civil society, and industry. Members of the AI Act Advisory Forum include universities and research centers research reference letter , organizations specializing in AI governance and policy, as well as some of the leading technology companies in the sector.