First GRACE Podcast ! Dr. Harriett Jernigan interviews Dr. Brandeis Marshall
First GRACE Podcast ! DR. Harriett Jernigan interviews Dr. Brandeis Marshall
Read more about First GRACE Podcast ! Dr. Harriett Jernigan interviews Dr. Brandeis MarshallGRACE: Global Review of AI Community Ethics is a new peer-reviewed, international journal at Stanford University. An open-access journal, indexed in Google Scholar, GRACE offers a unique intellectual forum for AI Ethics practitioners to share their work. OUR FOURTH issue is now LIVE

This volume of GRACE Journal presents our first installment of original student-authored policy proposals addressing one of the defining governance challenges of our time: how to responsibly regulate artificial intelligence across domains that directly shape human life. Stanford student contributors examine AI’s implications for autonomous transportation, healthcare, education, military applications, creative labor, and copyright law. Written for policymakers, technologists, and the public alike, these memos demonstrate how emerging leaders translate ethical principles into concrete regulatory frameworks. Collectively, the volume models how careful, evidence-driven student work can meaningfully inform real-world AI governance debates at local, national, and global levels. Future volumes include global perspectives from Stanford and beyond.
First GRACE Podcast ! DR. Harriett Jernigan interviews Dr. Brandeis Marshall
Read More Read more about First GRACE Podcast ! Dr. Harriett Jernigan interviews Dr. Brandeis Marshall
This volume of GRACE Journal presents our first installment of original student-authored policy proposals addressing one of the defining governance challenges of our time: how to responsibly regulate artificial intelligence across domains that directly shape human life. Stanford student contributors examine AI’s implications for autonomous transportation, healthcare, education, military applications, creative labor, and copyright law. Written for policymakers, technologists, and the public alike, these memos demonstrate how emerging leaders translate ethical principles into concrete regulatory frameworks. Collectively, the volume models how careful, evidence-driven student work can meaningfully inform real-world AI governance debates at local, national, and global levels. Future volumes include global perspectives from Stanford and beyond.
Detail from" TechTox: Nativity 2022," Harriett Jernigan, mixed media
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