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About this event

It’s late 2024 and 41% of legal professionals now use generative AI for work. Another 41% have imminent plans to do so.

With the pace of change accelerating, legal professionals need answers now, not months from now. Join us as we explore insights from our September 2024 survey and tap into the expertise of our panel to discuss:

  • AI has arrived, what impacts have we seen on the lawyers who use it?
  • What are firms doing with legal AI and how do you know if you are keeping up?
  • How does this growing shift impact clients, from billing practices to trust and integrity?
  • How do lawyers maintain their expertise when AI handles so many tasks?

The legal industry is undergoing a transformative shift, and firms that successfully leverage AI's capabilities while mitigating risks and maintaining ethical standards are poised to gain a competitive edge.

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Panellist

Laura Hodgeson

Generative AI lead at Linklaters

Laura has had a comprehensive legal career. From being ‘on the tools’ as a regulatory insurance lawyer, to leading the Knowledge function for a global law firm. More recently, she has taken on the responsibility for Generative AI exploration and implementation at Linklaters. She is now responsible for creating and delivering an AI adoption strategy – no small task at a firm the size of Links.

John Quinn

Exec Chairman of Quinn Emanuel Urquhart and Sullivan

There are titans in the world of the law, and then there is John Quinn. Often referred to as “fearless in litigation” and “one of the world’s leading litigation lawyers”, his reputation proceeds him. He is founding partner of Quinn Emanuel, the largest law firm in the world devoted solely to litigation and arbitration. He has strong views on where AI might take law firms and litigation.

Tom Whittaker

Director at Burgess Salmon

Tom Whittaker is a senior disputes and litigation lawyer at Burges Salmon LLP, ranked as a global market leader in AI law by Chambers and Partners. He specialises in high-profile, complex, and data-rich litigation, investigations and inquiries. He also leads Burges Salmon’s AI regulation team, advising and training clients on AI regulation and risk, as well as speaking and writing about the law of AI. He trained and qualified at Allen & Overy LLP which included advising DeepMind on its acquisition by Google