Bradford C. Brown Named Senior Fellow at the Cyberjustice Laboratory

We are proud to announce that Mr. Bradford C. Brown has been named Senior Fellow at the Université de Montréal’s Cyberjustice Laboratory.

This nomination celebrates a long-standing and valued partnership. Brad has been affiliated with the Lab for many years—collaborating on research, co-authoring publications, and contributing to major conferences. His role was central in formalizing our 2016 memorandum of understanding with the MITRE Corporation, which laid the groundwork for ambitious, cross-border projects to enhance access to justice.

His vision, experience, and innovative spirit have been and will continue to be an invaluable asset to our work. We are honoured to formalize this partnership through his new role as Senior Fellow.

Laboratory Fellows complement the Laboratory team and bring their expertise to enrich the research and innovation projects we conduct. Collaborating with lawyers, technology experts and social science researchers, they participate in the design and deployment of innovative technological solutions adapted to the judicial sector, empirical technology assessment studies or various knowledge mobilization activities bringing together researchers, students, practitioners and the private sector. Learn more about the Fellowship Program here.

Bradford C. Brown is the Managing Director of Qubit Advisors™, LLC, a strategic consulting and advisory firm in Metro Washington, D.C. He previously spent fifteen years at the MITRE corporation, in McLean, Virginia, most recently as the Chief, Administrative Operations & Technology Futures. He has been a lawyer for more than 30 years and was the 2nd U.S. Chief Counsel for Technology under President George H.W. Bush. Brad served as President & CEO of Protiviti Government Services. He founded the National Center for Technology and Law and was Associate Dean at Antonin Scalia School of Law at George Mason University. He was a member of the Administrative Conference of United States, Ad Hoc Committee that advised federal agencies on the use of AI. With a team at MITRE, their paper on Supervised Methods for Explainable Legal Prediction won the Peter M. Jackson Award from the International Association for Artificial Intelligence and Law. An AI tool that he co-invented is patent pending and has been commercially licensed. He is a past board advisory member of the Institute for Law and Technology at the Center for American and International Law and InformationWeek. A frequent speaker, he has authored or contributed to 58 published articles on law, technology, and policy. Brad holds degrees from Providence College, Harvard University, and Catholic University of America and has completed advanced executive training in AI and international business.

Ce contenu a été mis à jour le 29 octobre 2025 à 15 h 33 min.