Monday, April 6, 2026

April 21: The Artificial Intelligence & Access to Justice Conference

Title:
The Artificial Intelligence & Access to Justice Conference

Description:
Tens of millions of civil legal problems go unaddressed each year in the United States, while AI technologies are rapidly finding applications across virtually every domain of human endeavor. In this high velocity moment, the conference will examine how AI is being summoned to close the civil justice gap. 
Scholars, practitioners, reformers, and technologists will convene for public conversation and debate around three core questions: 
  • What is the access to justice movement? 
  • What is the potential of emerging AI technologies to address the civil justice crisis? 
  • And what safeguards should shape increased reliance on proposed AI solutions?

Date/Time:
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
12:30 - 1:00 pm EST Registration, Coffee, Light Snacks
1:00 - 5:15 pm EST Program
Eastern Time
Register Now!

Speakers:
  • Sateesh Nori, Senior Research Fellow, Center on Civil Justice, NYU Law
  • Hon. Liberty Aldrich (ret.), Executive Director, Children’s Law Center
  • Carolyn Coffey, Director of Litigation for Economic Justice, Mobilization for Justice
  • Neil Steinkamp, Managing Director, Stout
  • Alexander Horwitz, Chief Operating Officer, Legal Services for New York City
  • Sam Flynn, CEO, Josef
  • Greg Kochansky, American Arbitration Association
  • Prof. Milan Markovic, Texas A&M Law
  • Zach Zarnow, Executive Director, Scale Justice
  • Prof. Ellen Murphy, Wake Forest Law
  • Kate Brennan, AI Now
Moderators:
  • David Udell, Executive Director, National Center for Access to Justice, Fordham Law
  • Sateesh Nori, Senior Research Fellow, Center on Civil Justice, NYU Law
  • Prof. Olivier Sylvain, Fordham Law
By:
Fordham Law School

Credit:
CLE credits are approved in accordance with the requirements of the New York and New Jersey State CLE Boards for a maximum of 4.5 transitional and nontransitional credits (3.5 professional practice and 1.0 ethics).
In many other jurisdictions, you may be able to self-apply for credit.

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