experts
Charlotte Stanton
Director, Silicon Valley Office

about


Charlotte Stanton is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Charlotte Stanton was the inaugural director of the Silicon Valley office of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace as well as a fellow in Carnegie’s Technology and International Affairs Program. Her work concerns the international implications of advanced technologies with a focus on artificial intelligence.

Before joining Carnegie, she held research appointments at the University of California, Berkeley and the Carnegie Institution for Science, where she studied, respectively, the medium-term policy implications of artificial intelligence and the efficacy of California’s actions on climate.

Previously, as an interdisciplinary doctoral student at Stanford University, she co-authored five peer-reviewed articles spanning public policy, applied economics, and sustainability science. During her doctorate, she received the Outstanding Achievement in Mentoring Award for supervising and mentoring junior colleagues.

Prior to her academic roles, Stanton worked for the United Nations (UN), based in Kenya, developing and managing projects across Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America, with partners in government, industry, research, and nonprofit organizations. While in this position, she persuaded policymakers in the Ugandan government and the UN to back the first-ever randomized controlled trial in the Global Environment Facility’s $3.4 billion portfolio. The trial’s success was published in Science and covered by the New York Times, Washington Post, and PBS Newshour, among others.

Stanton currently serves as an adviser to the AI for Good Foundation. She also teaches a summer course at Stanford University’s School of Engineering. She received her BA (magna cum laude) from Princeton University, her MA from the University of Cape Town in South Africa, and her PhD from Stanford.


education
PhD, Stanford, MA, University of Cape Town, BA, Princeton University
languages
English

All work from Charlotte Stanton

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7 Results
commentary
The Legal, Ethical, and Efficacy Dimensions of Managing Synthetic and Manipulated Media

Carnegie has commissioned pieces on the legal, ethical, and efficacy dimensions of election-related synthetic and manipulated media.

  • +2
· November 15, 2019
Q&A
The World Isn’t Ready for AI to Upend the Global Economy

Governments across the globe are racing to keep up with the dizzying pace of AI advances. Like the steam engine before it, this technology is changing the world. How should policymakers respond?

· October 2, 2019
article
What the Machine Learning Value Chain Means for Geopolitics

Artificial intelligence, or AI, has become a major source of economic value, contributing as much as $2 trillion to today’s global economy. Sophisticated machine learning technology is driving this growth, but not everyone is investing equally—or reaping the rewards.

  • +3
· August 5, 2019
In the Media
San Francisco Is The First City In The World To Restrict Government Use Of Facial Recognition Technology. Hopefully It’s Not The Last.

Even in democracies like the United States, government use of facial recognition technology, in its current form, corrodes civil rights and civil liberties because its errors disproportionately impact vulnerable communities.

· May 23, 2019
Tech Dirt
commentary
Joining the Partnership on AI

The rapid advances in the field of artificial intelligence (AI) offer extraordinary opportunities and risks.

· May 15, 2019
Q&A
How Should Countries Tackle Deepfakes?

The technology to create sophisticated fake videos—deepfakes—is getting more advanced with serious implications for governments and businesses.

· January 28, 2019
In the Media
Is There a Difference Between Good and Bad Online Election Targeting?

With the elections heating up and news feeds brimming with ads for this candidate and that cause, voters need to be adept at recognizing persuasive from manipulative microtargeting.

· October 15, 2018
Hill