In conversation with James Manyika, Senior Vice President of Research, Technology and Society at Google
12
December 2024 — 11:15AM TO 12:45PM
Anonymous (not verified)
29 October 2024
Chatham House and Online
A conversation on AI’s global, societal and economic impacts.
2024 has been a landmark year for Artificial Intelligence (AI) development, deployment and use, with significant progress in AI-driven science, governance and cooperation. Looking ahead, AI continues to demonstrate economic promise and potential to expand on scientific breakthroughs in areas such as climate and health. This wave of innovation is occurring against a backdrop of geopolitical uncertainty and not all countries are fully able to participate. Heading into 2025, there are urgent questions about how best to maximise shared opportunities when it comes to AI and to advance global cooperation.
James Manyika, Senior Vice President of Research, Technology & Society at Google, will unpack what 2025 will bring for AI in science, economics, global governance and international cooperation.
Key questions include:
- What will be AI’s global societal and economic impact in 2025 and beyond?
- What are the ways AI could help increase economic growth and economy-wide productivity? What factors must be in place for this to happen?
- How best can we maximise shared opportunities and advance global cooperation when it comes to AI? Where can public-private partnerships unlock scientific breakthroughs for societal progress, combatting shared global challenges such as climate change and global health issues?
- What are the principles of safe, responsible AI, and how should companies remain responsive to their evolution and integrate them into technology design and implementation?
- What is the current – and ideal – role of technology companies in emerging mechanisms for global cooperation and national governance on AI?
This event is being held in partnership with Google.
You will receive notice by 13:00 on Wednesday 11 December if you have been successful in securing an in-person place.
Source: Chathamhouse Events