Entirety, little over one hour and 15 minutes. Listen to her reflections this afternoon. I also wish to express our gratitude to the honorable robert katzman. For all of his efforts to make this extraordinary symposium possible for our community. I look forward to sharing a few more words about judge rubber katzman in just a few minutes. I would also like to thank the present mary hartman and professor Wendi Williams from center who will join Justice Ginsburg in conversation this afternoon. Her authorized biographers and coauthors of own wordsbook, my published this last year. Finally, i wish to thank all of you for being here today for the special gathering. The bernstein symposium was dr. Ted under the memory of Martha Bernstein who is work in the areas of regulation, personnel and administrative reform continues to influence scholars today. He served as the founding dean of the Woodrow Wilson school of public and International Affairs at princeton. As president of brandeis, and for
Entirety, little over one hour and 15 minutes. Listen to her reflections this afternoon. I also wish to express our gratitude to the honorable robert katzman. For all of his efforts to make this extraordinary symposium possible for our community. I look forward to sharing a few more words about judge rubber katzman in just a few minutes. I would also like to thank the present mary hartman and professor Wendi Williams from center who will join Justice Ginsburg in conversation this afternoon. Her authorized biographers and coauthors of own wordsbook, my published this last year. Finally, i wish to thank all of you for being here today for the special gathering. The bernstein symposium was dr. Ted under the memory of Martha Bernstein who is work in the areas of regulation, personnel and administrative reform continues to influence scholars today. He served as the founding dean of the Woodrow Wilson school of public and International Affairs at princeton. As president of brandeis, and for
Hosted by Georgetown University and runs about one hour 15 minutes and begins with remarks by the universities president. [applause] good afternoon everyone and welcome. Its a pleasure to be with all of you. Azhar Spring Semester draws to a close for our bernstein symposium. I wish to begin by expressing our deepest appreciation to Justice Ruth Bader ginsburg forn joining us here on campus today. Its an honor to welcome her to gaston hall and to hear her reflections this afternoon. I also wish to express our gratitude to the honorable Robert Katzmann, chief judge of u. S. Court of appeals for the Second Circuit, for all his efforts to make this extraordinary symposium possible for our community. I look for to sharing a few more words about judge katzmann in just a moment. Id also like to thank professor Mary Hartnett and professor Wendy Williams from our Georgetown Law Center who will join Justice Ginsburg in conversation today. Ive has a hartman and professor williams are Justice Gins
The stage we are welcoming back to new america, andrew mcathe and erik brynjolfsson. Theyre back testimony with a followup. That book is machine, platform, crowd, harnessing our Digital Futures which we have copies of for sale forking the conversation, shy mention. By further introduction, andy this Principal Research scientist and erik is the director othe initiative on Digital Economy at m. I. T. , and both of them are the top headed scholars on how technology is changing business and economics. Joining them on stage, alice son griswold, a reporter where she covers the economy, another sharing economy and strata conflicts. She comes from slate magazine where she wrote about business and economics for in the money box column. So we have copies of erik and andys book for sale. Following the conversation and they will stick around and autograph them for you. Without further adieu, Andrew Mcafee and erik brynjolfsson, and alice son. Thank you for coming. Tell us bat your book. Well dive
To welcome t. J. Stiles and hes an awardwinning author based out of berkeley, california and hes a native of minnesota and the graduate of carlton college. He went on to do his graduate work in history, not u. S. History, but european history at columbia. He spent time at Oxford University press and i believe the board is here today t. J. Worked with gabor on a number of items and there is gabor in the audience. Items that gabor put together and those speeches were delivered right here at cwi. T. J. And i had a little time yesterday to talk about his work and to talk about the craft of writing and our conversation reminded me of the fact that this that we have of professional academic writing and then there is popular writing. I think the day has come that we can just move away from that and t. J. Stiles, his work testifies to the fact that you can write engaging bog rav we ideas, with argument, with analysis and above all else, original research. T. J. Likes the archives. There are a