Sue Anne Teo joined CEPS as an Associate Research Fellow in November 2024, working in the GRID unit. She is also a Researcher at the Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law and an External Lecturer at the University of Copenhagen.
Sue Anne’s primary research interest lies in examining the relationship between human rights and artificial intelligence (AI).
She holds a PhD in Law from the University of Copenhagen (2023) where she examined how AI challenged the foundations of human rights. She was also a PhD Europaeum Scholar during the same period. She has taught courses on Human Rights, Digital Technology and Democracy and international law. Her work has been published in AI and Ethics, Law, Innovation and Technology, Computer Law and Security Review and the Nordic Journal of Human Rights, amongst others. Sue Anne is also a long-time human rights practitioner. Prior to her PhD, she worked at the Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law as a Senior Programme Officer, served in a UN peacekeeping mission and also worked with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and the Malaysian National Human Rights Commission. She obtained her Master of Laws from University of Cambridge as a Cambridge Commonwealth Trust scholar and her Master of Science in Human Rights from the London School of Economics and Political Science as a Chevening Scholar. Sue Anne is from Malaysia but has been living in Scandinavia since 2011.