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In Search of a Good Governance Framework The use of AI and Facial Recognition Technologies in law enforcement has the potential to improve organisational efficiency and increase public safety and security. At the same time, if employed without sufficient safeguards and adequate governance frameworks, this technology may lead to unjustified interference with individual privacy, exacerbation of existing biases, and could eventually undermine public trust in police work. This event brings together relevant stakeholders to explore the potential benefits and risks of utilising this technology for law enforcement. Hosts Macquarie Law School, Bird&Bird and AUSCL Speakers Elizabeth Tydd – NSW Information Commissioner, CEO of the Information and Privacy Commission and Open Data Advocate. Dr Rita Matulionyte & Dr Hannah Harris – Macquarie Law School, Sydney Dr Nick Evans – Australia and New Zealand Policing Advisory Agency (ANZPAA) Associate Professor Nessa Lynch – Faculty of Law, Te Herenga Waka -Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand Inspector Carla Gilmore – Manager: Emergent Technologies, New Zealand Police Angus Murray – Queensland Council for Civil Liberties Speaker bios (Alphabetical order) Dr Nick EVANS is a senior Research and Innovation Associate at the Australia New Zealand Policing Advisory Agency (ANZPAA), and a lecturer in Policing and Emergency Management at the University of Tasmania. He is also a Researcher with the Tasmanian Institute of Law Enforcement Studies (TILES). Inspector Carla GILMORE – Manager: Emergent Technologies, New Zealand Police is currently leading New Zealand Police commitment to their use of new technology capabilities safely and responsibly with a particular focus on security, privacy, legal and ethical implications. Serving Police for 29 years, Carla has worked in a variety of roles including rural and urban policing, criminal investigations, intelligence, and a deployment to Bougainville to design and implement the Bougainville Police Service Intelligence System and as the APEC21 Security Project People Lead. Dr Hannah HARRIS is a legal scholar at Macquarie Law School. Her research area is transnational law and corporate regulation. Her current work analyses legal responses to transnational challenges, including illegal logging and forest degradation, modern slavery, foreign bribery and financial crime. Dr Nessa LYNCH currently divides her time between Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, and Academic Director of the Royal NZ Police College. Dr Lynch's primary research interest is the criminal law and the criminal justice system as it applies to children and young persons. Her secondary research area is in biometrics and state surveillance, particularly DNA and facial recognition technology. Dr Rita MATULIONYTE is a senior lecturer and researcher in law at Macquarie Law School, Macquarie University. She is an international expert in intellectual property and technology law, with her most recent research focusing on legal and governance issues surrounding Artificial Intelligence technologies. She currently leads projects on Government use of face recognition technologies: legal challenges and possible solutions and Towards More Transparent and Explainable Artificial Intelligence Technologies in Healthcare. Angus MURRAY is a Partner and Trade Marks Attorney at Irish Bentley Lawyers. He holds a published Master of Laws from Stockholm University and is an adjunct lecturer at the University of Southern Queensland. He is Vice President of the Queensland Council for Civil Liberties, a director of the Australasian Cyber Law Institute and the (fmr) Chair of Electronic Frontiers Australia’s Policy Committee. Ms Elizabeth TYDD is the NSW Information Commissioner, CEO of the Information and Privacy Commission and Open Data Advocate.