Governance of Emerging Technologies and Science

2025 conference schedule

Thank you for attending the 2025 GETS Conference

Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Arizona State University
Beus Center for Law and Society

2026 conference schedule

May 21 - 22, 2026

Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Arizona State University
Beus Center for Law and Society

Day 1 | Thursday, May 21

8 - 8:30 a.m.

Breakfast
Great Hall (2nd Floor)

8:30 - 8:45 a.m.

Welcome and logistics
Great Hall
  • Stacy Leeds – Willard H. Pedrick Dean, Regents and Foundation Professor of Law, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
  • Gary Marchant – Faculty Director, Center for Law, Science and Innovation, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law

8:45 - 10:15 a.m.

Plenary Session – Public Trust and Dialogue in Health Care
Great Hall
  • Moderator:
    • Amanda Courtright-Lim – Senior Program Coordinator, Bioethics and Disparities, Mayo Clinic
  • Panelists: 
    • George Poste – Chief Scientist & Regents Professor, Complex Adaptive Systems Initiative, ASU
    • Rachel Gur-Arie – Assistant Professor, Principal Investigator, Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, ASU
    • Stephanie R Carroll – Associate Professor, Public Health, University of Arizona
    • Frank Curci – Partner, Buchalter

10:15 - 10:30 a.m.

Break

10:30 a.m. - 12 p.m.

Concurrent Session 1
Session 1.1 – Panel: The Governance of Human in the AI loop
Room 150
  • Moderator: TBD
  • Panelists: 
    • Frank Giaoui
    • Anthony Marino
    • Kedhar Sankararaman
    • Karen Meza Villegas
    • Jeffrey Wishart
Session 1.2 – Global AI
Room 240
  • Conformity Assessment as a Regulatory Strategy of Regulatory Intermediation: AI Governance under the EU AI Act
    • Michael Sierra – Advocate and PhD Student, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • Policy Coordinating Hubs and AI Strategy in Developing Countries
    • Roy Nelson – Associate Professor of Global Studies, Thunderbird School of Global Management, Arizona State University
  • AI Policy Drivers, Comparative Empiric Indicators Toward AI Governance in East Asian and Pacific Nations
    • Emile Loza de Siles – Assistant Professor of Law, William S. Richardson School of Law, University of Hawai’i at Manoa 
Session 1.3 – AI and Personal Rights
Room 250
  • Aligning Artificial Intelligence to Civil Rights
    • Christopher Muhawe – Assistant Professor of Law, University of Illinois Chicago School of Law
  • Parenting the Machine and Raising Our Robotic Offspring
    • Helen A.F. Gould – Intel (Retired), Founder & Principal, Tech Strategizers LLC
  • Reanchoring the Law to the Human Baseline in the AI Age
    • Jim Ko – Principal Attorney, Ko IP & AI Law PLLC; Adjunct Professor, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law; Executive Director, The AI Rights Project
  • The Inconsentability of Deepfakes
    • Katrina Geddes – Assistant Professor of Law, The Ohio State University
Session 1.4 – Future Projections
Room 442
  • The Last Leviathans: How Government Functions in a High Automation World
    • Mattias Lederer – Student, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, Arizona State University
  • Prediction Markets, Innovation & Accountability in the Era of Web3.0
    • Nizan Packin – Professor of Business Law, CUNY; University of Haifa
  • Reassessing the Pacing Problem: Is Law Truly Unable to Keep Up with Technology?
    • Ali Ekber Cinar – McGill University
  • Back to the Future
    • Robert A. Bohrer – Emeritus Professor of Law, California Western School of Law
Session 1.5 – Health Technologies and Education
Room 450
  • Governing Synthetic Biology and Biomanufacturing: Assessing Gaps in International Regulatory Approaches
    • Karolina Zhukoff – Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, Georgia Institute of Technology
    • Margaret E. Kosal – Professor, Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Precision Health and Public Policy
    • Richard Williams –  Board Chair, Center for Truth in Science
  • Clinical Judgment in the Age of Algorithms: Ethical and Regulatory Limits on Physician Use of Artificial Intelligence in Diagnosis and Treatment
    • Janice Suchyta –  Partner, Buchalter, LLP
  • Lived Experiences with Specific Learning Disabilities/Difficulties Shapes Perspectives on Polygenic Risk Test Application in Educational Contexts
    • Amanda Courtright-Lim, PhD – Mayo Clinic
Session 1.6 – Digital Systems and Data
Room 644
  • Governing by Portal: Digital Public Services in Practice
    • Bonnie Ervin – PhD Candidate, Arizona State University
  • Experimental Governance and the Collingridge Dilemma: Regulatory Sandboxes for Artificial Intelligence
    • Michael Sierra – Advocate and PhD Student, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • Explaining Variation in Intermediation Architectures in European Digital Regulation
    • Rotem Medzini – Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • Lessons From Moltbook
    • Brad Allenby, Lincoln Professor of Ethics and Engineering, ASU

12 - 1 p.m.

Lunch
Room 544

1 - 2:30 p.m.

Concurrent Session 2
Session 2.1 – Panel: AI Governance and Technology Risk Management
Room 150
  • Moderator: TBD
  • Panelists:
    • Daniel Pietragallo – Special Counsel at Buchalter, LLP
    • Jonathon Talcott – Parter at Buchalter, LLP
    • Roy Hadley – Of Counsel at Buchalter, LLP
Session 2.2 – Neurotechnology and Regulation
Room 240
  • Are Global Rules for Neurotechnology Already Fragmenting?
    • Walter G. Johnson – Postdoctoral Fellow, Stanford Law School
  • Beyond Sensitivity and Primary Rights: Governing Neurodata Through Secondary Law and Psychological Invasiveness
    • Jianing Lu – JSD Student, University of Illinois Champaign-Urbana, College of Law
  • Prospect, Progress and Problems of Advancing Neuroscience Research with Neurotechnologies in Africa
    • Dr. Gideon Oluwatunase – University of Medical Sciences (UNIMED), Ondo City, Ondo State, Nigeria
  • Paper title TBD
    • Lucy Tournas, Associate Faculty, ASU Law
Session 2.3 – Intellectual Property and AI
Room 250
  • Strategic Overview of Agentic AI and Intellectual Property
    • Tyson Winarski – Patent Attorney/Professor, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
  • The March of the Undead: Some consequences of restoring patent-eligibility in genetic testing and genomic research
    • Robert Cook-Deegan – Professor, Arizona State University
  • Optimizing Sequential Innovation for the 21st Century
    • Allison A. Schmitt – Assistant Professor, University of Oregon School of Law
  • Public ≠ Permission: Copyright, AI Training, and Consent
    • Jim Ko – Principal Attorney, Ko IP & AI Law PLLC; Adjunct Professor, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law; Executive Director, The AI Rights Project
Session 2.4 – AI in the Courts
Room 442
  • When AI Judges the Justices: Model Alignment and the Limits of Supreme Court Prediction
    • Sean Harrington – Director of the AI & Legal Tech Studio, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, Arizona State University
    • Hayley Stillwell – University of Oklahoma College of Law
  • (Deep)Fake it `Til You Make It: Balancing AI-generated Evidence on the Scales of Justice
    • Alexander Gilman, Esq. – Gilman Law Offices
  • Interlocking Directorates and Artificial Intelligence
    • Amir Dezfuli, JD, LLM – Alumni, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, Arizona State University
  • When Artificial Intelligence and Cybersecurity Collide: The Lawyer’s Dilemma
    • Robert F. Copple, JD, PhD – CIPP
Session 2.5 – Space Exploration and Trust
Room 450
  • Implications of Space-Based AI Data Center Infrastructure on Territorial Governance
    • Carissma McGee – PhD Candidate, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Rui-Jie Yew – PhD Candidate, Brown University
    • Nadia Khan – PhD Candidate, Institute for Data, Systems, and Society (IDSS), Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Finding Common Space: The Novel Space Environmental Ethics Attitudes Measure
    • Caitlin Roe – PhD Candidate, Arizona State University
    • Joseph O’Rourke – Associate Professor, Arizona State University
    • Kathryn Johnson – Research Professor, Arizona State University
  • Trust as a Complex System: Exploring Trust Dynamics Along a Governance Continuum
    • Alires J. Almon – PhD Student, School for the Future of Innovation in Society, Arizona State University
  • A Strategic Design Framework for Community Voice in Space Technology Governance
    • Khushi Shah – Master’s Student, Parsons School of Design
    • Timiebi Aganaba – Assistant Professor, School for the Future of Innovation in Society, Arizona State University
Session 2.6 – Autonomous Machines
Room 644
  • The Automation Illusion Advanced Driver Assistance Systems, Human Perception, and Negligence
    • Tracy Pearl – William J. Alley Professor of Law, University of Oklahoma
  • Defining the Limits: How Purpose Limitation Can Guide Safe Design and Regulation of Semi-Autonomous Vehicles
    • Soumita Mukherjee – PhD Candidate, Pennsylvania State University
  • A Network-Based Experimental Protocol for Coordination, Efficiency, and Resilience in Autonomous Space-Grade Manufacturing Systems
    • Derick F. Tangap – Master’s Candidate, School of Complex Adaptive Systems, Nebula Research Lab – Arizona State University
  • Considering Human and Machine Perspectives
    • Helen A.F. Gould – Intel (Retired), Founder & Principal, Tech Strategizers LLC

2:30 - 2:45 p.m.

Break - snacks and beverages
Great Hall (2nd floor)

2:45 - 4:15 p.m.

Concurrent Session 3
3.1 – Panel: Chatbots for Student Mental Health: Clinical Risks, Real-World Use, and a Campus Governance Minimum Safety Standard
Room 150
  • Moderator: TBD
  • Panelists:
    • Elizabeth Leonard, PhD – Neurocognitive Associates, Faculty Fellow Center for Law, Science & Innovation, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, Arizona State University
    • Daniel Takla, MD – Department of Psychiatry Creighton University School of Medicine and Valleywise Heath
    • Barnaby Wasson, WassonPro Consulting
Session 3.2 – Organizational Governance and AI
Room 240
  • Compliance as a Catalyst: Transforming AI Risk into Strategic Advantage — The Cornerstone of Responsible Innovation
    • Paul Flanagan – Assistant Professor of Law, Drexel Law School
  • AI as a Mirror: Governance, Power, and the Behavioral Reality of Organizational Systems
    • David Dean – Author and Independent Researcher
  • Ambient Intelligence and the Practice of Law: How Wearable Technology Will Reshape Legal Work
    • Sean Harrington – Director of the AI & Legal Tech Studio, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, Arizona State University
  • The Regulatory Gap: Managing the Convergence of AI, Privacy, and Cybersecurity as Governance Plays Catch-Up
    • Ryan Johnson, Esq. – FIP, Chief Privacy Officer, The Technology Law Group
    • R. Scott Jones, Esq. – AIGP, CIPP/US, Co-Founder of The Generative Company
    • K Royal, PhD, JD – Crawford & Company, Arizona State University
Session 3.3 – Sustainability
Room 250
  • Crypto’s Climate Conundrum
    • Felix Mormann – Professor of Law, Texas A&M University School of Law
  • The Solar Paradox: A Multi-Level Analysis of Policy, Agency, and Collective Structures Shaping Smallholder Farmers Capability
    • Prashamsa Thapa, PhD – Arizona State University
  • Governing Beyond Carbon: Utilizing Nutritional LCA to Mitigate Phosphorus Risks in Alternative Proteins
    • Madison Horgan – Graduate Student, North Carolina State University
    • Khara Grieger – North Carolina State University
  • Looking Back as We Move Forward: Learning from Nanotechnology to Govern Other Emerging Technologies
    • Khara Grieger – North Carolina State University
Session 3.4 – AI: U.S. Regulatory Approach
Room 442
  • The Case For & Against an American Digital Markets Act (DMA)
    • Satya Marar – Research Fellow, Innovation, Competition & Governance, Mercatus Center at George Mason University
  • Guiding State AI Policy with Actionable Data-Driven Insights: The State AI Preparedness (SAIP) Index
    • Michael Akinwumi – Adjunct Professor, The George Washington University & Chief AI Officer, National Fair Housing Alliance
  • Evaluating America’s AI Action Plan through an Anticipatory Governance Lens
    • Dr. Bea Rodriguez-Fransen – Assistant Professor, Principled Innovation, Arizona State University Julie Ann Wrigley Global Futures Laboratory
  • Is Italy Winning the AI Governance Race? A Comparative Analysis of US Frameworks Amidst the Italian and the EU AI Acts
    • R. Aubrey Davis III – Assistant Professor of law, United States Air Force Academy
Session 3.5 – Medical Technology
Room 450
  • From Evidence to Ownership: Ethical Governance of EHR-Based Interventions Beyond the Trial
    • Alexandra Wicker – Graduate Research Assistant, Biomedical Ethics Research Program, Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, Arizona, USA
    • Shritha Gayathri – University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
    • Jon Tilburt – Biomedical Ethics Research Program, Mayo Clinic
  • Federal preemption of state artificial intelligence laws: lessons for health and healthcare from cases of technological convergence
    • Claire L. Ma – Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Ohio-Michigan Law and Emerging Technologies Network
    • Beth Ellinport – ORISE Fellow, US Army Corps of Engineers
    • Lisa Frazier – Assistant Director for Research, The Ohio State University Battelle Center for Science, Engineering, and Public Policy
    • Benjamin Trump – President, Society for Risk Analysis
    • Holly Jarman – Associate Professor, University of Michigan School of Public Health
  • AI and the Future of Public Health Surveillance: Ethical and Legal Governance Challenges Across Key Applications
    • Fallon Cochlin, JD – Research Specialist, Texas A&M University School of Public Health
    • Cason D. Schmit, JD – Associate Professor, Texas A&M University School of Public Health
    • Hye-Chung Kum, PhD – Professor, Texas A&M University School of Public Health
  • When Ethics Become Strategy: Comparative Governance of High-Risk Biomedicine
    • Yizhe Wang – PhD Student, The Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School of Public Policy, Georgia Institute of Technology
Session 3.6 – Cyber Security
Room 644
  • Cybersecurity in an Age of Quantum Computing
    • Larry Bridgesmith – Affiliated Professor, Vanderbilt Law School
  • From Compliance Theater to Operational Governance: Rebuilding Cybersecurity Standards in a Decentralized Institution
    • Keith Swanson – Manager of Cybersecurity Risk and Analysis, ASU Enterprise Technology
    • Ben Archer – ASU Enterprise Technology
    • Ali Abel-Fattah – ASU Enterprise Technology
    • Ben Bailey – ASU Enterprise Technology
  • Cross-Border Data Governance: Managing Privacy, Security, and Regulation in a Global Digital World
    • Rawad Habib – Professor of Blockchain, University of Advancing Technology
  • The End of Passwords
    • Matthew Murrell – Assistant Professor of Law, University of New Mexico School of Law

4:25 - 6 p.m.

Plenary Session – Space Law
Great Hall
  • Moderator: 
    • Diana Bowman – Dean of the School of Law, The Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
  • Panelists:
    • Timiebi Aganaba – Assistant Professor, School for the Future of Innovation in Society, ASU
    • R. Aubrey Davis III – Assistant Professor of Law, Director of Law and Emerging Technology, Deputy Department Head for Academics, Department of Law, U.S. Air Force Academy
    • Justin Wilmeth – Arizona State House Representative

6 - 8 p.m.

Reception and Student Poster Session
Great Hall + Museum of Democracy (2nd floor lobby)

Reception sponsored by KPMG Law

KPMG Law Logo

Day 2 | Friday, May 22

7:30 - 8 a.m.

Breakfast
Great Hall (2nd floor)

8 - 9:30 a.m.

Plenary Session – International Governance of AI
Great Hall
  • Moderator: Kellie Kreiser
  • PanelistsJonas Gamso, more TBD

9:30 - 9:45 a.m.

Break

9:45 a.m. - 11:15 a.m.

Concurrent Session 4
Session 4.1 – Panel: Governing Emerging Space Technologies
Room 150
  • Moderator: TBD
  • Panelists:
    • Timiebi Aganaba – Assistant Professor, Space and Society, Space Governance Lab
    • Jessamine Stone – Undergraduate student, School for the Future of Innovation in Society, Arizona State University; SURF Fellow
    • Summia Alabdulkarim – Graduate Student, Thunderbird School of Global Management, Director of Growth, Zenith Intelligence Group (ZIG)
    • Carissma McGee – Doctoral Student, Department of Aeronautics & Astronautics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
    • Joshua Barry – Undergraduate student, School of Political Science and Global Studies, School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University; Intelligence Community Fellow, ODNI Intelligence Community Center for Academic Excellence
Session 4.2 – AI Tort and Liability
Room 240
  • Generative AI as an Institutional Tool under the First Amendment
    • Tao Huang – Assistant Professor of Law, City University of Hong Kong
  • AI, Tort Duty, and Suable Intermediaries
    • Jane Bambauer – Eminent Scholar and Professor of Law, University of Florida
    • Ellen Bublick – Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, Arizona State University
  • Stranger Danger: Tort Liability for Harm to Minors in the Age of AI and Social Media
    • Gary Myers – Earl F. Nelson Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law
  • Consumer Protection and Institutional Limits: FTC Section 5 Enforcement in the Age of AI
    • Kedhar Sankararaman – Policy Associate, ACT | The App Association
    • Graham Dufault – General Counsel, ACT | The App Association
    • Brian Scarpelli – Senior Global Policy Counsel, ACT | The App Association
Session 4.3 – Higher Education and AI
Room 250
  • The Future of Higher Education in a Fully Automated Economy
    • Jeremy Weissman – Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Nova Southeastern University
  • Scientific Communities as Sites of Governance
    • Dr. Mayra Morales Tirado – Arizona State University
  • AI and Automation in Higher Education — The Thunderbird Perspective on Emerging Technologies
    • Dr. Laura Polk – Executive Director, Digital Initiatives & Learner Experience, Thunderbird School of Global Management, Arizona State University
  • Governing Technoscience Law and Knowledge in Science Technology and Society (STS)
    • Paolo Farah – Professor, University of Tulsa College of Law
Session 4.4 – Democracy and Technology
Room 442
  • The Technoprogressive City: Municipal Strategies for Building Digital Democracy
    • Matteo Rossi MacDermant – PhD Candidate, University of New Mexico
  • Context, Truth, Law
    • Jay Carpenter – Founder, Star15
  • AI Concentration of Power Risks
    • Paul Weitzel – Professor, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  • Beyond the Binary: Adaptive Institutional Design in Digital Platforms Governance
    • Denis Guimaraes – Partner, AGPR
Session 4.5 – AI and Children/Adolescence
Room 450
  • When Teens Bond with Machines: A Developmental Perspective on the New Frontier of Generative AI Policy and Adolescents’ Relationships
    • Taren L. McGray – Postdoctoral Research Scholar, Arizona State University
    • Thao Ha – Associate Professor, Arizona State University
    • Diana Bowman – Dean of the School of Law, The Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
    • Katina Michael – Program Director and Professor, University of Sydney
  • AI-Driven Storytelling to Mitigate Medical Trauma in School-Aged Children Undergoing Medical Procedures: A Preliminary Study
    • Primrose Dzenga – Research Associate, Arizona State University
  • Complete Human Ectogenesis: Closer Than We Think?
    • Henry Greely – Professor of Law, Stanford University
  • Property and IVG: Recognizing a Reproductive-Use Incident in Separated Human Tissue
    • Claire McGovern – Post-Doctoral Fellow, Stanford University, Center of Law and the Biosciences
Session 4.6 – Blockchain and Financial Technology
Room 644
  • Zero-Knowledge Proofs and Privacy Regulation: Using Cryptography to Balance Compliance and Trust
    • Rawad Habib – Professor of Blockchain, University of Advancing Technology
  • AI Meets Blockchain: Industry Self-Regulation as a Solution to Jurisdiction and Choice of Law Issues in Intelligent NFT Transactions
    • Tolulope Falokun – Assistant Professor of Law, University of Detroit Mercy School of Law
  • Governing the Next Phase of Financial Crime Intelligence: The Case for Data Sharing
    • Doron Goldbarsht – Associate Professor, Macquarie Law School, Sydney
    • Timothy Goodrick – KPMG Sydney
  • Agentic AI in Financial Advising
    • Jiaying Jiang – Associate Professor of Law, University of Florida Levin College of Law

11:15 - 11:30 a.m.

Break - snacks and beverages
Great Hall (2nd floor)

11:30 a.m. - 1 p.m.

Plenary Session – AI Companions and Intimate Robots
Great Hall
  • Moderator:
    • Gary Marchant, PhD, JD – Faculty Director, Center for Law, Science and Innovation, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
  • Panelists
    • Thao Ha – Associate Professor, Psychology, ASU
    • April Xu – Forrester Fellow, Tulane University
    • Ronald C. Arkin – Regents’ Professor Emeritus, School of Interactive Computing, College of Computing, Georgia Tech
    • Lori Andrews – University Distinguished Professor Emerita, Professor of Law Emerita, Director of the Institute for Science, Law and Technology, Illinois Tech Chicago Kent College of Law

1 p.m.

Grab-and-go Lunch
Great Hall (2nd floor) + Museum of Democracy (2nd floor lobby)