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Jackson Janes is a resident senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund and president emeritus of the American Institute for Contemporary German Studies at Johns Hopkins University in Washington, DC. He has been affiliated with AICGS since 1989.
Lindsay Gorman is managing director of and senior fellow with GMF Technology. A quantum physicist and computer scientist by training, she leads work on US-China emerging-technology competition, artificial intelligence (AI) and democracy, and transatlantic innovation.
Gorman recently served as a White House senior adviser on emerging technology, national security, and democracy issues. At the Office of Science and Technology and the National Security Council, she crafted US technology competition and national security strategy, and led international technology initiatives for the US-EU Trade and Technology Council and the Quad. She founded and led the council’s AI cooperation workstream. She was also the principal architect of the Advancing Technology for Democracy agenda of the Presidential Initiative for Democratic Renewal.
Gorman’s career spans 15 years at the intersection of technology and international relations. She has served as an expert contributor to the Cyberspace Solarium Commission, a technology adviser to US Senator Mark Warner, a jury member for German innovation agency SPRIND’s Deepfake Challenge, and a fellow with the National Academy of Sciences. Her technical background includes building machine learning systems for self-driving cars for the DARPA Urban Challenge and pioneering experiments on quantum topological materials, which Nature Physics has published.
Gorman regularly delivers keynote addresses and speaks at popular conferences such as SXSW. She has testified before the US Congress on AI, cybersecurity, and technology innovation. Her research and analyses have been featured in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, and The Atlantic, and she frequently conducts television and radio interviews. She has appeared on CNN, CBS’s Face the Nation, National Public Radio, and Bloomberg. She holds a master’s degree in applied physics from Stanford University and a bachelor’s degree in physics from Princeton University.
Josh Rudolph is managing director and senior fellow of GMF’s Strategic Democracy Initiatives. He has two decades of high-level experience at the intersection of finance and national security across the US government, multilaterals, think tanks, academia, and Wall Street.
At GMF since 2019, Rudolph has launched several programming initiatives that elevate think tank research and civil society coalitions focused on emerging autocratic threats to democracy. These GMF initiatives have analyzed malign authoritarian financial interference in elections, national security threats from unregulated money launderers, international development aid to counter kleptocracy, homegrown toolkits of autocratic corruption in Turkey and Poland, Ukrainian governance reforms amid war and reconstruction, US civil-military relations in the context of democratic backsliding, and democracy promotion in the United States.
Before joining GMF, Rudolph served in a range of US government positions dealing with finance and national security, including as senior fellow on USAID’s anti-corruption task force, adviser to the US executive director at the International Monetary Fund, director of international economics at the White House National Security Council, and deputy director of the US Treasury markets room. Before beginning his public service, Rudolph worked for seven years at J.P. Morgan as an investment banker and financial markets research strategist.
He holds a bachelor’s degree in finance from Babson College and a master’s degree in public policy with a concentration in international trade and finance from the Harvard Kennedy School.