
March 19 | Hybrid Event
Responsible AI for Intelligence Education
Join us for a hybrid event with our panel of Washington D.C. experts will lay out the legal and ethical Analytic Tradecraft requirements that govern the use of any intelligence sources in analysis – including material generated by AI.

Time & Location
March 19 | 4-6PM EST Online and In Person
Hybrid Event
About The Event
Our panel of Washington D.C. experts will lay out the legal and ethical Analytic Tradecraft requirements that govern the use of any intelligence sources in analysis – including material generated by AI. The primary responsibility is the need to be able to explain underlying data and methodologies. That responsibility is all the more challenging with AI because of the complicated nature of underlying algorithms which are not easily explained to laymen or policy makers. The intelligence professionals trained in our college programs will, therefore, face an ethical challenge of how to honestly meet the tradecraft requirements in the case of AI.
Then we would hear from the private sector about system security challenges posed by AI and about how private industry is attempting to establish governance expectations. What will be the legal and regulatory regime in which our graduates will work? What kind of liability might they face in the event of abuse.
Finally, we will hear from JMU faculty about how AI is worked into the curriculum now. Given all that, what should we be teaching in the future about AI?
This event is open to all.
Speakers:
-
Dr. Barry Zulauf, Adjunct Professor, Intelligence Analysis, James Madison University
-
Dr. Phil Baxter, Assistant Professor, Intelligence Analysis, James Madison University
-
Amanda Molina, Corporate Counsel – Cyber and Artificial Intelligence, Microsoft
The Future Federal Job Market: Career Insights from JMU Alumni
Tue, Apr 22
|Webinar


Time & Location
Apr 22, 2025, 5:30 PM – 6:30 PM
Webinar
About The Event
Hear from JMU alumni about their perceptions of the current job landscape for federal civilian and military employees, government contractors, and those supporting this $2.5 trillion segment of the economy. Explore critical questions such as the potential boom in federal contracting and the anticipated talent deficit within government roles. Learn practical advice for pursuing opportunities over the next 12 to 24 months. Speakers: · Mike Battle, CEO of BRMi, a federal government contractor for over 20 years · Tim Hartman, CEO of GovExec, a federal market media leader · David Grant, former federal senior executive and founder of a professional services firm