Renée DiResta is the technical research manager at Stanford Internet Observatory, a cross-disciplinary program of research, teaching and policy engagement for the study of abuse in current information technologies. Renee investigates the spread of narratives across social and media networks, with an interest in understanding how platform algorithms and affordances intersect with user behavior and factional crowd dynamics. She studies how actors leverage the information ecosystem to exert influence, from domestic activists promoting health misinformation and conspiracy theories, to the full-spectrum information operations executed by state actors. At the behest of SSCI, Renee led an investigation into the Russian Internet Research Agency’s multi-year effort to manipulate American society, and presented public testimony. A year later, she led an additional investigation into influence capabilities that the GRU used alongside its hack-and-leak operations in the 2016 election. Renee has studied influence operations and computational propaganda in the context of pseudoscience conspiracies, terrorist activity, and state-sponsored information warfare, and has advised Congress, the State Department, and other academic, civil society, and business organizations on the topic. Renée regularly writes and speaks about technology policy, and influence operations. She is an Ideas contributor at Wired and The Atlantic. Her tech industry writing, analysis, talks, and data visualizations have been featured or covered by numerous media outlets including the New York Times, Washington Post, CNN, CNBC, Bloomberg, Yale Review, Fast Company, Politico, TechCrunch, Wired, Slate, Forbes, Buzzfeed, The Economist, Journal of Commerce, and more. She appeared in the documentary The Social Dilemma.
Kate Klonick is an Associate Professor at St. John's University Law School, a fellow at the Brookings Institution, Yale Law School’s Information Society Project, Harvard Berkman Klein Center and a Distinguished Scholar at the Institute for Humane Studies. Her writing on online speech, freedom of expression, and private internet platform governance has appeared in the Harvard Law Review, Yale Law Journal, The New Yorker, the New York Times, The Atlantic, the Washington Post and numerous other publications. For the 2023-2024 academic year, she is a Fulbright Schuman Innovation Scholar in the European Union where she is a Visiting Professor at SciencesPo and University of Amsterdam researching and writing about the Digital Services Act and Digital Markets Act.
Charles Stewart III is the Kenan Sahin Distinguished Professor of Political Science at MIT, where he has taught since 1985, and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. His research and teaching areas include congressional politics, elections, and American political development. His current research about Congress touches on the historical development of committees, origins of partisan polarization, and Senate elections. His recent books of congressional research include Electing the Senate (2014, with Wendy J. Schiller), Fighting for the Speakership (2012, with Jeffery A. Jenkins), and Analyzing Congress (2nd ed., 2011). Since 2001, Professor Stewart has been a member of the Caltech/MIT Voting Technology Project, a leading research effort that applies scientific analysis to questions about election technology, election administration, and election reform. He is currently the MIT director of the project. Professor Stewart is an established leader in the analysis of the performance of election systems and the quantitative assessment of election performance. Working with the Pew Charitable Trusts, he helped with the development of Pew’s Elections Performance Index. Professor Stewart also provided advice to the Presidential Commission on Election Administration. His research on measuring the performance of elections and polling place operations is funded by Pew, the Democracy Fund, and the Hewlett Foundation. He recently published The Measure of American Elections (2014, with Barry C. Burden).
Kim Wyman, a Senior Fellow at the Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC), is a nationally recognized leader in election administration. She served as Washington Secretary of State for nearly a decade and is only the second Republican woman in state history to be elected to statewide office. Secretary Wyman was appointed by President Joe Biden to serve as a Senior Election Security Advisor at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. She began her 30-year career in elections as the Thurston County Elections Director and served as the elected Thurston County Auditor. A graduate of California State University Long Beach, Wyman earned a Master of Public Administration degree from Troy State University. She co-authored Elections 2020: Controlling Chaos with her husband, John Wyman.
Professor Richard L. Hasen is an internationally recognized expert in
election law, writing as well in the areas of legislation and statutory
interpretation, remedies, and torts. He is co-author of leading
casebooks in election law and remedies. Hasen served in 2020 as a CNN
Election Law Analyst and as an NBC News/MSNBC Election Law Analyst in
2022. He directs UCLA Law’s Safeguarding Democracy Project.
From 2001-2010, he served (with Dan Lowenstein) as founding co-editor of
the quarterly peer-reviewed publication, Election Law Journal. He is
the author of over 100 articles on election law issues, published in
numerous journals including the Harvard Law Review, Stanford Law Review,
and Supreme Court Review. He was elected to The American Law
Institute in 2009 and serves as Reporter (with Professor Douglas
Laycock) on the ALI’s law reform project: Restatement (Third) of Torts:
Remedies. He also is an adviser on the Restatement (Third) of Torts:
Concluding Provisions.
His op-eds and commentaries have appeared in many publications,
including The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post,
Politico, and Slate. Hasen also writes the often-quoted Election Law
Blog, which the ABA Journal named to its “Blawg 100 Hall of Fame” in
2015. The Green Bag recognized his 2018 book, The Justice of
Contradictions: Antonin Scalia and the Politics of Disruption, for
exemplary legal writing, and his 2016 book, Plutocrats United, received
a Scribes Book Award Honorable Mention. His 2022 book, Cheap Speech: How
Disinformation Poisons Our Politics—and How to Cure It, was named one
of the four best books on disinformation by the New York Times. His new
book, A Real Right to Vote: How a Constitutional Amendment Can Safeguard
American Democracy, will be published by Princeton University Press in
February 2024.