Artificial Intelligence and the Poverty Entrepreneur: Can It Make a Difference?
Wednesday, March 20, 2024, 11 am – 12:15 pm (Eastern Time Zone, USA)
The revolution in artificial intelligence has been hailed as the driver of the fourth industrial revolution, a game changer, and transformative. It has also been perceived to be a source of bias, social manipulation, job loss, market volatility, socioeconomic inequality, weakening ethics, and a threat to privacy. What are its implications, both positive and negative, when it comes to those in poverty when trying to start a business? Could it be an empowering tool, or will it put many of these ventures out of business? In this exciting webinar, we feature four unique perspectives on AI, entrepreneurship, and the disadvantaged.
Panelists include:
Dean Shepherd
Ray and Milann Siegfried Professor of Entrepreneurship Management & Organization
University of Notre Dame, Indiana (USA)
Joshua Sahib
Managing Director, Lowder Center for Entrepreneurship
Auburn University, Alabama (USA)
Yong Suk Lee
Assistant Professor of Technology, Economy, and Global Affairs
University of Notre Dame, Indiana (USA)
Caio Flavio Stettiner
Professor of Entrepreneurship & Innovation
Paula Souza State Center for Technological Education (Brazil)
Moderator: Michael H. Morris
Director, Global Partnership for Poverty & Entrepreneurship
University of Notre Dame, Indiana, USA
Click here to register: https://notredame.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_V61yzP3gScSRrsGmY4F2yA#/registration
For more information, please contact mmorri24@nd.edu.
Michael H. Morris, Ph.D.
Professor, Entrepreneurship and Social Innovation
Editor, Journal of Developmental Entrepreneurship
Keough School of Global Affairs
3169 Jenkins-Nanovic Halls
University of Notre Dame
South Bend, Indiana 46556
Ph.: 574-631-9880