U of T alum Don Harrison creates chair in AI and technology

Dec 16, 2025
Donald Harrison (LLB 1997).

How can the law be used to drive innovation and make life in 2125 better than in 2025?

A transformational gift from University of Toronto alumnus Donald Harrison (LLB 1997) will advance research in how artificial intelligence and legal technology will impact the law and the legal profession.

“We are profoundly thankful to Donald Harrison for his visionary commitment in establishing this endowed chair,” said University Professor and Dean Jutta Brunnée, James Marshall Tory Dean’s Chair. “His generosity strengthens our research leadership position in the rapidly changing landscape of law and technology.” To recognize his generous benefaction, the chair will be named the Don Harrison Chair in AI and Technology.

Donald Harrison graduated from the Henry N.R. Jackman Faculty of Law in 1997. He started his career at the Toronto law firm of Davies, Ward, Phillips & Vineberg. In 2000, he joined Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati in Palo Alto, CA, where he was first introduced to Google and helped take the company public, eventually joining Google full time in 2005.

Today, Harrison leads Google’s strategic partnerships worldwide across Google’s product and business groups. He also oversees the corporate development team that handles Google’s global acquisitions and investments and has worked on Google’s largest transactions, including YouTube, DoubleClick, Nest and Motorola.

AI requires significant investment to harness its potential, allowing innovation while making sure our legal, ethical and social frameworks keep pace with its development.

He was also involved in the acquisitions of DNN Research — the neural networks start-up founded by Geoffrey Hinton, University Professor emeritus of computer science and Nobel Prize winner, and two of his graduate students – and later, DeepMind, helping establish Google’s commitment to world-leading AI research. Harrison says U of T is widely recognized for its contributions to the development of neural networks and deep learning, particularly through the pioneering work of Hinton.

AI requires significant investment to harness its potential, allowing innovation while making sure our legal, ethical and social frameworks keep pace with its development.

“AI is evolving from a specialized, technical field into a foundational technology that has the potential to reshape how we live, work, learn, and grow as a society,” says Harrison. “AI requires significant investment to harness its potential, allowing innovation while making sure our legal, ethical and social frameworks keep pace with its development.”

He says an endowed chair, focused on AI and technology at the law school, creates a dedicated intellectual home to research these issues and to make sure researchers explore the humanistic and legal dimensions of AI with rigor.

“U of T’s Faculty of Law is a natural nexus to convene diverse, interdisciplinary perspectives and act as forum where technology, economic incentive, public policy and fundamental rights can be debated, and ultimately translated into practices that help this technology achieve its promise.”

At the forefront of law and technology

Professor Anthony Niblett who currently holds the Canada Research Chair in Law, Economics, and Innovation, will assume the new chair on Jan. 1, 2026. His research focus includes artificial intelligence, innovation, contract law, competition policy and judicial behaviour.

“As the inaugural chairholder, Anthony is uniquely equipped to advance our thinking around law and technology and its implications for society as well as the legal profession,” said Dean Brunnée. “This chair serves as a catalyst for innovation.”

Innovation, Niblett says, improves our lives, as most would agree that life today is far better than it was a century ago.

man in sports jacket

Professor Anthony Niblett.

“My great regret is that I’m not living 100 or 200 years from now,” Niblett says. When it comes to innovation, he says the law plays an integral role, given the many ways the two intersect. He adds that Canada, among its G7 peers, needs to leverage the law and policy to encourage greater investment in emerging AI companies here at home.

“You need good legal institutions to encourage innovation. How do you use law and policy to foster new technology that benefits everyone in society? How do you use the law to control new technology? And how to use new technology to improve the law? These questions affect everything I think about,” says Niblett.

man in sports jacket

Professor Anthony Niblett.

Blue J Legal: A major player in the legal tech sector

Niblett co-founded Blue J Legal, AI software for tax research, 10 years ago with colleagues, Benjamin Alarie, Osler Chair in Business Law, Professor Albert Yoon, and Michael J. Treblicock Chair in Law and Economics.  Last summer, the U of T spinoff secured $167-million in financing led by two U.S. venture-capital firms.

“The technology’s capacity has just exploded in the last few years,” he says, reflecting on the rudimentary machine learning models of Bue J’s early days. “We don’t have to create or structure data in the same way we did ten years ago. The large language models can be asked very in-depth questions about how a fact pattern fits within the law.” 

Niblett sees big changes on the horizon, as language models and computer processing speeds ramp up at a pace never seen before. “We predicted this world where people would be told – instantly – what you’re doing is lawful or not,” says Niblett.

“It’s not clear to me that we need to take years to decide these cases. A lot of courts are trying to cut through their backlog by using the facts of the case and AI. But where do you draw the line between instantaneous legal advice from a machine versus an instantaneous legal ruling from the machine?” He says that despite the increasing accuracy of current models, there’s still a role for the human lawyer.

The changing nature of legal services

“We teach students about legal reasoning, understanding the nature of legal argument and understanding how the law helps society as a whole. It’s not about teaching an ‘answer’, but rather, understanding the process. Otherwise, the law will just be a button-pushing exercise and that’s not what the law is.”

“Understanding what the law is –and what the law should beis an incredibly important part of what I’m trying to teach. But I think the nature of legal services will change enormously i – in the next ten years.”

Harrison agrees. He says AI has the potential to give access to legal services unavailable before, such as drafting wills, or navigating minor matters in court which can improve access to justice. He adds helping people and small businesses navigate these new technologies is a big opportunity, as the market for these types of services grow.

Tomorrow’s lawyer: Intersecting tech and AI

“My hope is that the development of this technology does create new opportunities for the legal profession. By automating routine, labour-intensive tasks like document review and preliminary legal research, AI frees legal professionals to focus on distinctly human, higher-value work: strategic analysis, creative problem-solving and ethical judgment,” says Harrison.

Harrison says, in this shift away from labour to a focus on wisdom and strategy, he also sees a new class of lawyer emerging at the intersection of law and AI: one that enables its development while also helping society understand how these technologies work. “We want to make sure the benefits of technology are enhanced by our ability to build connecting frameworks of trust and public benefit.”

By Nina Haikara