Greetings! Hillary Clinton appeared at Georgetown University’s annual Global Women Leaders Summit this week. On Thursday, she described the experience on Instagram.
Clinton served as Secretary of State and ran as the 2016 Democratic presidential nominee. She’s remained a visible presence in conversations about women’s leadership. She called the Georgetown summit “one of my favorite events every year.” The event is hosted by Georgetown’s Women in Public Service Project, a program dedicated to expanding women’s representation in public service worldwide.
This year’s gathering drew women from senior levels of government and civic organizations. Younger political and civic leaders from around the world also participated. Clinton wrote that attendees “exchange ideas, experiences, and lessons and build relationships for ongoing mentorship and collaboration.” That cross-generational design has been central to the summit from the start.
The 2026 discussions focused on emerging technologies and their effects on women and women’s leadership. Participants also examined potential areas for collective action. Clinton didn’t name specific technologies in her post. Georgetown hasn’t released a formal summary of the summit’s outcomes.
Technology’s relationship to gender equity has become a significant topic at international policy forums. United Nations commissions and World Economic Forum panels have raised concerns about algorithmic bias, digital access, and online safety for women in public roles. Those discussions have grown more pressing in recent years. AI tools are now more widely deployed in hiring, governance, and information systems. The effects on women specifically, from underrepresentation in tech industries to gender bias in automated decision-making, have drawn increasing policy attention. Georgetown’s decision to center the 2026 summit on these questions places it within that broader debate.
Clinton expressed appreciation for the event in her post. “Thank you to everyone who made this year’s summit such a success,” she wrote. “Here’s to keeping the conversation going.”
Georgetown’s Women in Public Service Project launched with backing from several academic and policy institutions. Its annual summit now draws participants from dozens of countries. Clinton has been a recurring presence at Georgetown events, and the university has a long record of hosting senior government officials for policy discussions.
Reactions to Clinton’s continued public role tend to run along familiar lines. Supporters argue that her decades of experience in diplomacy and international affairs make her a credible voice on global women’s issues. Critics question whether high-profile gatherings of this kind translate into tangible policy change. Both sets of concerns are worth noting. Readers can decide how much weight to give each.
What this week’s summit confirms is relatively simple. It happened. Clinton found it valuable. The conversation about technology, women, and leadership has momentum at Georgetown. By all indications, it isn’t stopping anytime soon.
This story originally appeared on Celebrityinsider
