Transforming the Law – A Digital World

Episode 3, A Purposeful Edge: Leading in Uncertainty 

When technology races ahead and tradition digs in its heels, leadership must become the bridge — strategic, ethical and deeply human. 

In this episode of A Purposeful Edge: Leading in Uncertainty, Dr Peter Collins is joined by Terri Mottershead, Executive Director of the Centre for Legal Innovation, to explore how legal leadership is being reshaped by artificial intelligence, digital disruption and new demands for justice and innovation. 

Terri doesn’t just talk about digital transformation. She lives it.
A self-described “practical strategist and entrepreneur,” Terri has spent decades helping the legal sector evolve, adapt and imagine new ways of working. Her starting point? Technology and people belong together. But to get there, we must challenge entrenched thinking and embrace cross-disciplinary collaboration.

“We need ethicists, legal experts and a broad range of voices shaping what digital guardrails should look like.”

Terri shares stories from across the legal ecosystem from practitioners embracing AI-powered research tools to global firms rethinking client engagement and access to justice. She highlights how the most effective leaders are those who don’t treat technology as an end in itself, but as a catalyst for deeper human-centred reform.

It’s a philosophy rooted in history. Terri reflects on her time at Oxford, where the walls of her old college honour the legacy of Alan Turing and the codebreakers of Bletchley Park. Their work didn’t just accelerate the end of World War II — it laid the foundation for the computers in our pockets today. It’s a powerful reminder that the future has always been shaped by those who dared to think differently.

“AI won’t replace people. But people who use AI well will replace those who don’t.”

But Terri is clear-eyed about the challenges. Many legal organisations still operate within rigid, hierarchical structures that stifle innovation. She argues that if law is to meet the moment, leaders must dismantle these barriers, encourage curiosity and unleash the creative potential of their teams. Because digital capability is not enough, what’s needed is a mindset shift.

Her vision goes beyond law firms. Terri sees potential for AI and digital transformation to improve systems across healthcare, education and governance, anywhere, she says, that we’re grappling with complex, people-centred problems. But for these technologies to serve the greater good, we must embed ethics at every level.

“Connected leadership means bringing together people from legal, science, ethics and governance. Innovation without ethics is a risk — not a revolution.”

She shares practical insights on fostering innovation from how she starts each day with intentional thinking, to how she builds bridges between siloed disciplines. Her leadership is rooted in legacy: not just what she builds today, but what she leaves for the next generation. In every conversation, every system redesign, every AI debate, she is asking: does this serve people? Does it advance justice? Does it help create a better world?

Dr Peter Collins and Terri explore what it means to lead through technological change with purpose and clarity. Together, they unpack how courage, collaboration and ethical foresight can shape a future where law isn’t left behind by innovation but helps lead it.

Listening to Terri is a reminder that transformation is not about replacing people with machines. It’s about augmenting human potential with digital tools, and building systems that are smarter, fairer and more connected. It’s not just the legal sector that needs this kind of leadership, it’s all of us.

This is leadership for a digital world, thoughtful, grounded and ready to adapt for the greater good.

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🎧 Tune into the full conversation between Dr Peter Collins and Terri Mottershead to explore how leaders can balance innovation with ethics, and reshape the future of law through digital transformation, collaboration and care.
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Natasha Eskinja

Digital Communications Coordinator

Natasha is driven by a profound passion for both creativity and analytics, a synergy that fosters authentic storytelling in the digital realm with both innovation and integrity. 

Throughout her career, she has consistently integrated the overarching marketing and communications narrative with the emotional connections of audiences. She is currently pursuing a Certificate in Society and the Individual from Flinders University, furthering her exploration of human behaviour and the critical importance of connectedness between organisations, individuals, and communities.