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Webinar

AI: Current themes and future trends in Public Law and Procurement Law

  • Event date 29 Apr 2025
  • Event time 12:00 - 13:00
  • Event location Webinar
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In December 2024, the chapter on public law and procurement law and artificial intelligence (AI) in the second edition of the 2024 practitioners’ textbook The Law of Artificial Intelligence was published.

In this webinar discussion, co-authors Tom Whittaker (Burges Salmon LLP), Professor Rebecca Williams (the University of Oxford) and Azeem Suterwalla KC (Monckton Chambers) discuss the impact of the chapter, looking ahead and what those in the public sector should be doing now regarding AI growth, existing legal obligations and future implications.

Blue Abstract Technology Data Wavy Lines in Holographic Style representing artificial intelligence

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Presenters

Tom Whittaker

Tom is a senior technology lawyer at independent UK law firm Burges Salmon LLP. He advises and trains public and private sector organisations on AI regulations and speaks at industry events on AI law and risk also. Tom is part of multiple industry AI-working groups and was ranked as a global market leader in AI law by Chambers and Partners (2024)

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Azeem Suterwalla KC

Azeem is a leading junior with a well-established practice across Chambers’ core areas, offering expertise in Judicial Review, Public Procurement, Competition, Information Law, and general commercial work. He is a member of the Attorney General’s A Panel of Junior Counsel to the Crown, advising and representing the UK government in his areas of practice. Azeem is recommended in the Legal 500 and Chambers UK as a leading practitioner across four practice areas: Administrative/Public Law, Public Procurement, Civil Liberties and Human Rights, and Community Care. He was previously Counsel to the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (“IICSA” – between January 2016 and 2020).

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Rebecca Williams

Rebecca is a Professor of Public Law and Criminal Law. Her work increasingly focuses on the relationship of law and technology, particularly algorithmic decision making, and the ways in which the law will need to develop in order to keep pace with technological developments. Together with colleagues from the Department of Computer Science and the University of Bristol she is a co-founder of OLTEP, the Oxford LawTech Education Programme. Her work also examines optimum methods of decision-making and the use of criminal law as a form of regulation. It has been cited in the European Court of Justice, the Supreme Court and Court of Appeal of England and Wales, and the High Court of Australia.

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