Artificial Intelligence and Automation in Indian Human Resource Practices: Ethical Recruitment, Generative AI Integration, Predictive Workforce Planning, and AI-Enabled Leadership Succession

Authors

Dr. Amit Bijon Dutta

Mecgale Pneumatics Pvt. Ltd., Nagpur, Maharashtra (India)

Article Information

DOI: 10.51244/IJRSI.2026.1303000049

Subject Category: Human Resource Management

Volume/Issue: 13/3 | Page No: 549-571

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-03-12

Accepted: 2026-03-18

Published: 2026-03-28

Abstract

This paper looks at the growing impact of Artificial Intelligence on human resource management, focusing specifically on the Indian context. Human resource functions, which once cantered on personnel administration and compliance, are now evolving into strategic areas of managing human capital. This change is supported by data analytics, machine learning, and predictive systems. In this shift, AI plays a key role in improving operational efficiency, workforce intelligence, and leadership continuity. The paper examines this change across four main areas: ethical AI in recruitment, generative AI as an operational helper, predictive workforce planning, and AI-supported leadership identification and succession planning.
The study suggests that AI in HR should not be seen just as a tool for automation; rather, it signals a major change in how we manage talent, organizational capabilities, and future leadership. In recruitment, AI speeds up screening and improves candidate matching, but it also raises concerns about algorithmic bias and fairness, especially within India's diverse socio-economic landscape. In HR operations, generative AI aids in documentation, policy drafting, training content, and communication processes. This reduces the administrative burden and allows HR professionals to focus on more important strategic tasks. Predictive analytics enhances workforce planning by helping identify attrition risks, skill gaps, and future talent needs early on. Similarly, AI-supported leadership analytics helps systematically identify high-potential employees, although these systems often struggle to capture deeper human traits like ethical judgment, emotional maturity, and crisis leadership.
The paper concludes that while India shows relatively strong AI adoption in HR compared to global averages, responsible use is crucial. Transparency, fairness audits, explainability, data protection, and human oversight should be central to AI governance. The future of HR depends not on replacing human judgment but on enhancing it through responsible and strategically targeted technology integration.

Keywords

Artificial Intelligence, HR Analytics, Ethical Recruitment

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