
You belong in this room.
AI is reshaping the systems that serve your clients, your communities, and the people you have dedicated your career to. We are building the governance frameworks that make sure it does that well. Your knowledge, your experience, and your voice are what make that possible.
Artificial intelligence is already making consequential decisions about the people and communities human services exists to serve. Screening tools flag families for investigation. Algorithms recommend placements, prioritize cases, and allocate resources. Predictive systems shape who gets services and who does not. The stakes could not be higher, and the pace of deployment is accelerating.
You bring knowledge and experience that can only come from the field: what clients actually face, what communities actually need, and what accountability to vulnerable people looks like in practice. Getting AI governance right requires you at the table where these decisions are made.
AI in the Room is here to make sure that happens, and your participation is what makes it possible.
What We Are Building
AI in the Room is an initiative at the University of Southern California Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work, anchored within the Grand Challenge to Harness Technology for Social Good in partnership with NASW. It brings together the two communities that must work together to get AI governance right: the social work and human services professionals who understand what is actually at stake for clients and communities, and the AI researchers and technologists who understand how these systems are built from the inside.
The mechanism is a structured participatory codesign process built around what actually happens when AI meets real lives. This process creates AI governance policies that are iteratively designed, tested, and refined before moving through NASW into professional standards, practice guidelines, and national frameworks that reach the entire field.
When we get this right, AI becomes a genuine force multiplier for the people and communities we serve:
Why Your Voice Is Irreplaceable
The governance frameworks that come out of this process will only be as strong as the knowledge and experience that goes into them.
Leaders
We need leaders who can speak to the policy, institutional, and organizational dimensions of AI in social services.
Practitioners
We need frontline practitioners who can speak to what deployment looks like on the ground.
Community
We need community members and advocates who can speak to what affected communities actually experience.
This is the work that determines whether AI becomes a tool for equity or another mechanism for harm. We cannot get it right without you.
Apply to ParticipateAbout the Team
Stephen Lieberman
Founder, 1023AI · DSW Candidate, USC
Stephen Lieberman is a DSW candidate at the USC Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work, President of the NASW Southern California Caucus, and President of the Phi Alpha Honor Society, Omicron Epsilon Chapter. He brings more than 20 years of leadership in AI, technology, and social innovation across nonprofit, government, industry, and academic sectors, including senior roles at Northrop Grumman and the Naval Postgraduate School, where he served as a Principal Investigator for multiyear social technology research and development programs.
Dr. Marya Wright, DSW, LCSW
External Design Partner · President-Elect, NASW California
Dr. Marya Wright, DSW, LCSW is the President-Elect of NASW California, a USC DSW alumna, Phi Alpha leader, and a published researcher on algorithmic decision-making in child welfare. She is a nationally recognized social work educator, consultant, and forensic social worker. She serves as External Design Partner for this initiative, bringing deep domain expertise and the institutional knowledge to carry the work we do at AI in the Room design sessions forward into professional practice and national policy.
Apply to Participate
Join AI in the Room
AI in the Room is building a community of social workers, AI researchers, nonprofit leaders, policymakers, and community members to collaboratively shape responsible AI in social services. Through structured Design Labs and ongoing collaboration, participants will help inform the development of a Framework for Responsible AI in Social Services. Interest does not obligate participation, and all inquiries are confidential. We will respond personally to every inquiry.