搁别蝉别补谤肠丑蔼蚕耻别别苍鈥檚: Championing AI for social justice
May 19, 2020
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Queen's researcher Samuel Dahan is focused on making legal services more equitable, and he knows all about winning and losing disputes in battle, and the importance of a level playing field for combatants. While researching alternative dispute resolution for his PhD in law at the University of Cambridge, this versatile, black-belt competitor won many bouts in the ring as Cambridge taekwondo team captain and a varsity kickboxer. He also earned medals in the French taekwondo nationals, and the French and British kickboxing championships.
Did you know that the university recently launched a new central website for Queen鈥檚 research? From in-depth features to the latest information on how our researchers are confronting COVID-19, the site is a destination showcasing the impact of Queen鈥檚 research. Discover 搁别蝉别补谤肠丑蔼蚕耻别别苍鈥檚.
鈥淚n martial arts competition, you don鈥檛 want to fight someone less experienced than you or someone better than you. Fights are arranged so there is a balance of power,鈥 says Dahan, Director of the Conflict Analytics Lab and assistant professor in the Faculty of Law at Queen鈥檚 University. 鈥淏ut fighting is the worst scenario for settling disputes in the real world."
Dahan has teamed up with Xiaodan Zhu, assistant professor in the Ingenuity Labs Research Institute and the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Queen鈥檚, to develop an AI (artificial intelligence)-powered set of tools to help level the legal playing field for lower- and middle-income Canadians.
In the wake of COVID-19 unemployment, Dahan and collaborators also recently launched , an open access app to help recently laid off workers.
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