AI Ethics Navigator
Episode 1 of the Navigating King V series This episode marks the start of a new three-part series on AI governance in South Africa. Navigating King V: AI Governance in South Africa examines what South Africa’s updated corporate governance code means for ethics, accountability, and board oversight as AI systems increasingly shape organisational decision-making. The series explores King V not as a compliance exercise, but as a framework for ethical leadership in conditions of technological uncertainty. Guest: Dr Ntokozo Mahlangu | Head of Operational Risk, Corporate & Investment Banking, Investec Dr. Ntokozo Mahlangu is Head of Operational Risk for Corporate & Investment Banking at Investec, where he works at the intersection of risk management, governance, and emerging technology. He holds a PhD and has extensive experience spanning operational risk, wealth and investment operations, and banking across South Africa and the UK. Beyond his technical expertise, Ntokozo’s work engages with how African philosophy and values can inform AI governance. His recent work explores financial inclusion through an AI lens, examining how technology can bridge South Africa's economic divides with empathy and contextual intelligence rather than simply automating exclusion at scale. He also serves on the strategic advisory board of The DaVinci Institute. In this episode, we explore: • King V as moral inflection point: Why South Africa's updated corporate governance code represents an opportunity to reclaim moral leadership amid governance fatigue and trust deficit. • Ubuntu philosophy explained: What "I am because we are" means for corporate governance, and why this uniquely South African philosophy of interconnectedness, dignity, and human responsibility now appears in formal governance frameworks. • Beyond Western AI ethics: How Ubuntu offers a relational, community-centred alternative to individualistic frameworks of autonomy, fairness, and accountability—and what it surfaces that Western approaches miss. • Impact materiality in practice: How King V shifts board accountability from profit-only to societal impact, requiring boards to measure success by how decisions affect communities, not just shareholders. • Financial inclusion reimagined: Concrete examples of Ubuntu-centred AI design in financial services—including how AI can "see" informal economies, honour dignity in township resilience, and build credit models that recognize stokvels and spaza shops. • Relational risk management: How Ubuntu philosophy surfaces new categories of AI risk—risks to human dignity, social cohesion, and community trust—that conventional operational risk frameworks miss. • From compliance to moral courage: Why boards must move beyond checkbox governance to values-driven leadership, and what stakeholder service (not management) actually means in practice. • Global South contribution: How South Africa can shape global AI governance by embedding community-centred values, and why indigenous knowledge systems must be producers, not just consumers, of AI frameworks. • Implementation reality: Practical guidance for boards operationalizing Ubuntu principles under King V—from diagnostic questions to measuring impact beyond performative metrics. • Education and future leaders: How universities and business schools must prepare students to carry Ubuntu principles into boardrooms through experiential learning and community engagement. "Ubuntu is not just about South African values. It's actually a universal human value that emphasizes community, dignity, and shared humanity over hyper-individualistic, market-driven ethos." Dr. Ntokozo Mahlangu Episode length: 1 hour 32 minutes Series: Navigating King V: AI Governance in South Africa (Episode 1 of 3) Connect with Kamini: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kamini-govender-942225159/
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