TY - JOUR
T1 - Machine Learning and Asylum Adjudications
T2 - From Analysis of Variations to Outcome Predictions
AU - Katsikouli, Panagiota
AU - Byrne, William H.
AU - Gammeltoft-Hansen, Thomas
AU - Hogenhaug, Anna Hojberg
AU - Moller, Naja Holten
AU - Nielsen, Trine Rask
AU - Olsen, Henrik Palmer
AU - Slaats, Tijs
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2013 IEEE.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Individuals who demonstrate well-founded fears of persecution or face real risk of being subjected to torture, are eligible for asylum under Danish law. Decision outcomes, however, are often influenced by the subjective perceptions of the asylum applicant's credibility. Literature reports on correlations between asylum outcomes and various extra-legal factors. Artificial Intelligence has often been used to uncover such correlations and highlight the predictability of the asylum outcomes. In this work, we employ a dataset of asylum decisions in Denmark to study the variations in recognition rates, on the basis of several application features, such as the applicant's nationality, identified gender, religion etc. We use Machine Learning classifiers to assess the predictability of the cases' outcomes on the basis of such features. We find that depending on the classifier, and the considered features, different predictability outcomes arise. We highlight, therefore, the need to take such discrepancies into account, before drawing conclusions with regards to the causes of the outcomes' predictability.
AB - Individuals who demonstrate well-founded fears of persecution or face real risk of being subjected to torture, are eligible for asylum under Danish law. Decision outcomes, however, are often influenced by the subjective perceptions of the asylum applicant's credibility. Literature reports on correlations between asylum outcomes and various extra-legal factors. Artificial Intelligence has often been used to uncover such correlations and highlight the predictability of the asylum outcomes. In this work, we employ a dataset of asylum decisions in Denmark to study the variations in recognition rates, on the basis of several application features, such as the applicant's nationality, identified gender, religion etc. We use Machine Learning classifiers to assess the predictability of the cases' outcomes on the basis of such features. We find that depending on the classifier, and the considered features, different predictability outcomes arise. We highlight, therefore, the need to take such discrepancies into account, before drawing conclusions with regards to the causes of the outcomes' predictability.
KW - Asylum adjudications
KW - automated decision-making
KW - machine learning
U2 - 10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3229053
DO - 10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3229053
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85144776075
VL - 10
SP - 130955
EP - 130967
JO - IEEE Access
JF - IEEE Access
SN - 2169-3536
ER -