Why digital health regulation needs a Global South voice
Digital health frameworks risk being built around assumptions that don't travel well. A short note on what's missing — and how to close the gap.
Convenings, learning experiences and original commentary across digital health governance, AI governance, clinical legal education and access to justice.
Open-access sessions unpacking emerging questions in law, technology and governance — typically 60 minutes with live Q&A.
Small-group, working sessions where participants build frameworks, draft policy and stress-test ideas together.
Multi-track convenings bringing together practitioners, scholars and regulators across regions and disciplines.
Intensive learning experiences led by senior practitioners — designed for in-depth, applied skill-building.
Cohort calls, named programmes and special invitations as the JVN Fellowship rolls out.
An open conversation on emerging digital health regulation — frameworks, gaps and what practitioners can do today.
A working session on translating AI governance principles into practical advisory and oversight tools.
A multi-track convening on the most consequential questions at the intersection of law and emerging technology.
A masterclass for clinicians and faculty rethinking pedagogy, supervision and access to justice in digital practice.
The JVN Fellowship is being designed as a global, cohort-based programme for emerging legal and policy leaders working at the intersection of law, technology and governance. New cohorts and named tracks will be announced through this page and the JVN briefings.
To be notified when applications open, subscribe to the newsletter or express interest through the community membership form.
Short essays, working perspectives and conference reflections by Olawunmi Opeyemi Obisesan, PhD — on the questions JVN is built to answer.
Digital health frameworks risk being built around assumptions that don't travel well. A short note on what's missing — and how to close the gap.
Principles are abundant; operational frameworks are scarce. A working perspective on what it takes to move from values to verifiable practice.
What does it mean to train lawyers for problems that did not exist when our curricula were designed? Notes from teaching at the frontier.
Technology can expand access — or quietly entrench exclusion. Five questions every reformer should keep close.
Subscribe to the JVN briefings for early notice of webinars, workshops, fellowships and new commentary from our founder.