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    You are at:Home»In the News»Lawfare Daily: Panel Discussion Recorded at Fordham Law School’s Transatlantic AI and Law Institute Event

    Lawfare Daily: Panel Discussion Recorded at Fordham Law School’s Transatlantic AI and Law Institute Event

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    By Newsroom on June 4, 2025 In the News

    LawFare published a podcast episode on the connection between technology and democratic backsliding and how the role technology has played a role in supporting or undermining democracy—recorded from a panel discussion that the Transatlantic AI and Law Institute convened on May 2, 2025, at Fordham Law School. Fordham Law Professors Chinmayi Sharma and Olivier Sylvain organized the event.

    Political scientists who study democratic backsliding—the slow erosion of a country’s institutions—have raised alarms about the state of democracy in the United States under the second Trump administration. At the same time, the administration has embraced technology—particularly AI—as a tool for implementing many of its policies, from immigration enforcement to slashing government functions and staffing. And the ties between Washington, D.C. and Silicon Valley appear tighter than ever, with Elon Musk wielding unprecedented control over the executive branch through his quasi-governmental DOGE initiative.

    How should we understand the connection between technology and democratic backsliding? Are they interlinked at this moment in the United States? How has technology played a role in supporting or undermining democracy during other historical moments?

    On May 2, Lawfare Senior Editor Quinta Jurecic moderated a panel discussion on these questions at Fordham Law School’s Transatlantic AI and Law institute, featuring panelists Joseph Cox, a journalist and co-founder of 404 Media; Orly Lobel, the Warren Distinguished Professor of Law and founding director of the Center for Employment and Labor Policy (CELP) at the University of San Diego; Aziz Huq, the Frank and Bernice J. Professor at the University of Chicago Law School; and James Grimmelmann, the Tessler Family Professor of Digital and Information Law at Cornell Tech and Cornell Law School.

    Thanks to Fordham for recording and sharing audio of the panel, and to Chinmayi Sharma and Olivier Sylvain of Fordham Law School for organizing the event.

    Listen to the complete June 4, 2025 episode, “Lawfare Daily: Democratic Backsliding and the Role of Technology.”

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