Cambridge, MA – The Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School is pleased to announce the Technology and Public Purpose Project's non-resident fellows for the 2021-22 academic year.
In addition to our current non-resident fellows, we welcome three new leaders: Ashlie Burkart, Chief Scientific Officer at Germin8 Ventures; Joaquin Quiñonero Candela, Board of Directors of the Partnership on AI and Woodrow Rosenbaum, Chief Data Officer for GivingTuesday. These three industry leaders join our current stellar lineup non-resident fellows. Read the profiles of the Technology and Public Purpose Project’s non-resident fellows below.
“Ashlie, Joaquin and Woodrow will make valuable contributions to our project’s mission of ensuring that emerging technologies are developed and managed in ways that serve the public good. Through their appointment, they will enrich our community with their expertise at the highest levels of intersection between technology policy.” — Director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs and Former U.S. Secretary of Defense, Ash Carter
TAPP Project Non-Resident Senior Fellows
Dr. Joaquin Quiñonero Candela serves on the Board of Directors of the Partnership on AI, a non-profit partnership of academic, civil society, industry, and media organizations creating solutions so that AI advances positive outcomes for people and society, and is a member of the Spanish Government’s Advisory Council for Artificial Intelligence.
Until September 2021, Joaquin was the Distinguished Technical Lead for Responsible AI at Facebook, where he led the technical strategy for areas like fairness and inclusiveness, robustness, privacy, transparency, and accountability. Before this, he built and led the AML (Applied Machine Learning) team at Facebook, driving product impact at scale through applied research in machine learning, language understanding, computer vision, computational photography, augmented reality, and other AI disciplines. AML also built the unified AI platform that powers all production applications of AI across the family of Facebook products. Prior to Facebook, he built and taught a new machine learning course at the University of Cambridge (in 2012, together with Carl Rasmussen), worked at Microsoft Research, and conducted postdoctoral research at three institutions in Germany, including the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics. He received his PhD in 2004 from the Technical University of Denmark.
Joaquin is currently taking a break to fully support his wife with rebuilding her career, and to enjoy their kids before they all leave the nest. He recently resigned from Facebook after 9.5 amazing years in order to create the space he needs.
Lisa Gelobter is the CEO and Founder of tEQuitable. Using technology to make workplaces more equitable, tEQuitable provides a confidential platform to address bias, discrimination, and harassment.
Lisa has worked on products that have been used by billions of people and on several pioneering Internet technologies, including Shockwave, Hulu, and the ascent of online video.
Most recently, she worked at the Obama White House, serving as the Chief Digital Service Officer for the Department of Education. Previously, Lisa acted as the Chief Digital Officer for BET Networks.
Lisa is one of Inc.'s 100 Women Building America's Most Innovative and Ambitious Businesses, Fast Company’s Most Creative People, and serves on boards for: the Obama Foundation, Times Up, and The Education Trust.
Lisa is one of the first 40 Black women ever to have raised over $1mm in VC funding. She is also proud to be a Black woman with a Computer Science degree. Go STEM!
DJ Patil is currently the Head of Technology at Devoted Health and a Senior Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School. Dr. Patil was appointed by President Obama to be the first U.S. Chief Data Scientist where his efforts led to the establishment of nearly 40 Chief Data Officer roles across the Federal government. He has been active in national security and was awarded by Secretary Carter the Department of Defense Medal for Distinguished Public Service.
He also was Chief Scientist, Chief Security Officer and Head of Analytics and Data Product Teams at the LinkedIn Corporation where he co-coined the term Data Scientist. He has also held a number of roles at Skype, PayPal, and eBay. He was previously a faculty member at the University of Maryland and a AAAS Science & Technology Policy Fellow for the Department of Defense. In 2014, he was selected by the World Economic Forum as a Young Global Leader and is also a Member of the Council of Foreign Relations.
Nick Sinai is a non-resident Senior Fellow at the TAPP Program. Nick served as HKS adjunct faculty, where he taught (2015-2020) a technology and innovation in government field class. Nick is a Senior Advisor at Insight Partners, a leading global venture capital firm investing in high-growth software companies. Insight Partners has raised more than $29 billion and invested in more than 300 growth-stage software companies. Previously, Nick served as U.S. Deputy Chief Technology Officer in the Obama White House. He led President Obama’s Open Data Initiatives, co-authored President Obama’s 2013 Executive Order making open and machine-readable the default for new government information, led the relaunch of Data.gov, and served a national advocate for open government data. Nick also helped start and grow the Presidential Innovation Fellows program, which brings entrepreneurs and technologists into government. Nick is an advisor to Upsolve, a nonprofit that improves consumer access to Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, and Coding It Forward, a nonprofit that places computer science, data science, and design students in federal agencies.
TAPP Project, Non-Resident Fellows
Afua Bruce is the Chief Program Officer at DataKind, a global nonprofit that harnesses the power of data science and AI in the service of humanity. Afua leads DataKind's product offerings, center of excellence, volunteer community, and chapter network to partner with social sector organizations. Prior to joining DataKind, Afua was the Director of Engineering for New America's Public Interest Technology program. At New America, Afua oversaw projects in technology and policy to improve outcomes in criminal justice reform, foster care, immigration, the opioid epidemic, and more. She also supervised the Public Interest Technology University Network. Previously, she spent several years leading science and technology strategy and program management in the Federal government—as the Executive Director of the White House's National Science and Technology Council and in a variety of positions at the FBI. Before joining the Federal government, she started her career as a software engineer at IBM. Afua holds a degree in Computer Engineering from Purdue University, and an MBA from the University of Michigan.
Dr. Ashlie Burkart is the Chief Scientific Officer at Germin8 Ventures. As a double-boarded anatomic and clinical pathologist with expertise in gastrointestinal/liver pathology, Dr. Burkart is uniquely skilled at investigating the causes and nature of gastrointestinal diseases, as well as the laboratory application of biologic, chemical and physical sciences. She is also a grant-funded researcher conducting gut barrier mechanistic studies with far reaching implications for human health and disease.
Dr. Burkart received a B.A. in biology from Brown University, where she graduated magna cum laude with an honors in neuroscience, and an M.D. from McGill University’s Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences. Dr. Burkart completed residencies in anatomic pathology and clinical pathology at John Hopkins Medical Institutions, as well as a fellowship in gastrointestinal/liver pathology at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. She is a recipient of the Dean’s Award for Distinguished Teaching, the highest teaching award that is awarded by the graduating medical school class. Dr. Burkart was also awarded the National Leonard Tow Humanism in Medicine Award, which the medical college awards to “one faculty member who demonstrates both clinical excellence and outstanding compassion.” She is based in Pennsylvania.
Dana Chisnell is a pioneer and thought leader in civic design. As a Senior Fellow at the National Conference on Citizenship, she is partner-founder in a civic startup called Project Redesign where she works to put humans at the center of public policy. Her most recent work was a large qualitative study about the experience of people applying for unemployment assistance during the COVID-19 pandemic. Much of her career has involved studying design in voting and election administration. She is the managing editor of the Field Guides To Ensuring Voter Intent, which are in use in thousands of election offices worldwide. The Field Guides are in the permanent collection at the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. She was a founding member of the U.S. Digital Service in the Obama White House. In 2019, Dana was named one of the world’s most influential people in digital government by Apolitical.
Gretchen Greene, C.Phil., M.S., J.D., is an international AI policy advisor, lawyer, computer vision scientist, and former U.S. national lab mathematician, developing AI and human rights policy guidance and industry best practices. Greene has worked for the U.S. Departments of Energy, Defense, Justice, and Homeland Security, the U.K. House of Lords, MIT, Harvard, and Partnership on AI. Greene has been interviewed on AI policy and face recognition by the BBC and Politico Europe, testified on biometrics bills, written AI guidance read in ~8,000 cities, developed algorithms for autonomous car navigation and terrorist tracking, and published in machine learning, policy and science journals. Greene is a fellow at the Belfer Center, a senior advisor at The Hastings Center, counsel at Baker Thomas law, and CEO at Greene Strategy. The ethics of AI and emotional intelligence. Government briefing book: Emerging technologies and human rights. EqualAIs.
Karen Hao is the senior AI editor at MIT Technology Review, covering the field’s cutting-edge research and its impacts on society. She writes a weekly newsletter called The Algorithm, which was named one of the best newsletters on the internet in 2018 by The Webby Awards, and co-produces the podcast In Machines We Trust, which won a 2020 Front Page Award.
In March of 2021, she published a nine-month investigation into Facebook’s Responsible AI efforts, and the company’s failure to prioritize studying and mitigating the way its algorithms amplify misinformation and extremism. Her findings were cited in a Congressional hearing on misinformation two weeks later. In December of 2020, she also published a piece that shed light into Google’s dismissal of its ethical AI co-lead Timnit Gebru, which Congressional members later cited in a missive to the company.
Prior to MIT Tech Review, she was a tech reporter and data scientist at Quartz. In a past life, she was also an application engineer at the first startup to spin out of Alphabet's X. She received her B.S. in mechanical engineering and minor in energy studies from MIT.
Chris Lynch is the chief executive officer of Rebellion Defense. Previously, he was the founding director of Defense Digital Service (DDS), a SWAT team of exceptional software engineers focused on the Department of Defense's most critical technology challenges. He served three secretaries of defense, launching numerous high-impact programs, including Hack the Pentagon, JEDI Cloud, counter-drone solutions, and providing technical expertise on programs including the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter and next-generation GPS OCX. He was an early member of United States Digital Service and is a lifelong tech entrepreneur. Chris is a Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School Belfer Center, working with Secretary Ash Carter on ensuring new technology serves a public purpose and good. Chris also is a regular lecturer at Stanford's computer science department, encouraging nerds to serve in government.
Woodrow Rosenbaum is the Chief Data Officer for GivingTuesday. In his role, he has been instrumental in shaping the global generosity movement and has led ground-breaking research and analysis of individual giving behaviors. He leads the GivingTuesday Data Commons, bringing together a coalition of more than 100 collaborators coordinated through eight working groups as well as data teams in 50 countries to understand the drivers and impacts of generosity to inspire more giving of all types. Woodrow brings expertise in moving markets and transforming audiences from passive participants to active and vocal ambassadors. Woodrow is also the Founder of With Intent Strategies, an international agency specializing in brand reimagination. Woodrow is a member of the Generosity Commission Research Task Force, serves as a Co-Chair for Global Impact Canada's Board of Directors, and was recently named a Fellow at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School with the Technology and Public Purpose project.
Emily Tavoulareas is a technologist with expertise in service design, modernization, and organizational change. In her career she has been a product manager, service designer, user researcher, program designer, and advisor to senior executives transforming the products, services, and/or organizations they run. In every role she translates a deep understanding of human and organizational needs into viable solutions.
From 2013-2018 she worked to modernize the way the federal government delivers services to the public. From co-founding the first agency-level team of the U.S. Digital Service and modernizing the Veterans application for healthcare, to piloting and scaling the Human-Centered Design methodology and serving as Senior Policy Advisor the U.S. Chief Technology Officer at the White House, she has experienced firsthand what it takes to improve public services.
She is a fellow at Georgetown’s Beeck Center, adjunct professor at Columbia University, and an independent advisor working with leaders across industries.