
description
As artificial intelligence (AI) and technological advances take on an increasingly prominent role in our society, BIPOC and immigrant communities face the threat of biases and outright hostilities being encoded and automated into surveillance, enforcement, and judicial tools. At the same time, creative leaders in the nonprofit sector are leveraging and building new technologies to better deliver culturally responsive services at scale to their communities. In this two-part series on the intersection of AI, technology and immigrant justice, GCIR invites funders to deepen their knowledge in the space as well as gain insights on how philanthropy can deploy investments that build the movement’s capacity to respond to emergent threats and opportunities.
Part 2: Tech for Good: Building Innovative Tools to Serve Immigrant Communities
In the hands of justice-driven leaders, computer technologies hold significant potential for advancing the public good. Across the country, nonprofits are harnessing the power of AI and building innovative tech tools to bridge gaps in culturally responsive services while expanding their organizational impact. From accessible legal tools, to on-demand translation services, to tech-based workforce development, the movement for immigrant justice is leveraging technology in creative ways to transform and scale service delivery. In this discussion, funders will learn from talented innovators about the tools they have built and how philanthropic investments can catalyze this burgeoning field.
SPEAKERS
- Swapna Reddy, Co-Founder & Co-Executive Director, ASAP
- Daisy Magnus-Aryitey, Co-Founder & Co-Executive Director, Code the Dream
- Bartlomiej Skorupa, Co-Founder & Chief Operating Officer, Mobile Pathways
- Alex Mitchell, Product Manager, Tarjimly
co-sponsors
registration
Register by 5pm PT on February 12th.
Registration is also open for for the first part of the series, "The Threat of AI and Technology to Immigrant Justice," taking place on Wednesday, February 5th. Click here to register.
transparency commitment
Thank you for your interest in this program. GCIR's webinars and funder learning opportunities are made possible through the time and expertise of presenters from the field. In the spirit of transparency, GCIR will make available the list of webinar participants to presenters upon request, unless the registrant requests to remain anonymous (to register anonymously for this program uncheck the box "show in roster").
Photo by Rawpixel on iStock, is licensed under standard license.