Dr Fabian Braesemann
About
Dr Fabian Braesemann is a Departmental Research Lecturer in AI and Work at the Oxford Internet Institute at the University of Oxford.
In his research, Dr Braesemann analyses large amounts of data to decipher the complex systems that shape our lives in business, society and politics.
His research is published in leading academic journals and he regularly writes for international newspapers and serves as a speaker at conferences and public events.
Expertise
- Artificial Intelligence (AI)
- AI and work
- Data science
- Economics of AI
- Future of work
- Startups
- Entrepreneurship
- Digitalisation
Selected publications
- Winners and losers of generative AI: Early Evidence of Shifts in Freelancer Demand (2025)
- The impact of founder personalities on startup success (2023)
- The global polarisation of remote work (2022)
- ICTs and the urban-rural divide: can online labour platforms bridge the gap? (2020)
- Understanding the Platform Economy: Signals, Trust, and Social Interaction (2020)
- PropTech: Turning Real Estate Into a Data-Driven Market? (2020)
- PropTech 2020: the future of real estate
- Can digital technologies speed up real estate transactions? (2020)
Media experience
Dr Fabian Braesemann has media experience including being interviewed for and featured in national and international newspapers including The Times, The Guardian, Wired, Forbes, Business Insider, Yahoo News, The Washington Post, Wirtschaftswoche, Property Week and fDi Intelligence. He has written for publications such as The Conversation, Zeit Online, FOCUS Online, der Freitag as well as blog posts on the Oxford Internet Institute website. Dr Braesemann has also been interviewed for various radio programmes and podcasts.
Recent media work
- How DeepSeek and ChatGPT will affect your career (Focus Online, 2025)
- It's complicated: Why simple solutions are out of the question, not only in migration (der Freitag, 2025)
- Trump's tariffs keep the world on tenterhooks: Three ways out of the dilemma (Focus Online, 2025)
- DOGE Staffers at HUD Are From an AI Real Estate Firm and a Mobile Home Operator (WIRED, 2025)