[Air-L] GIG-ARTS 2018 Program: Cardiff, 26/27 April - "Overcoming Inequalities in Internet Governance: framing digital policy capacity building strategies" Centre for Internet and Global Politics/Cardiff University

Niels ten Oever lists at digitaldissidents.org
Wed Apr 18 04:49:22 PDT 2018


Hi Hanna,

That would be tremendously helpful, thanks!

Up for broad crowd-sourced academic streaming team (broadCAST) ;)

Best,

Niels

On 04/18/2018 12:51 PM, Hanna Kreitem wrote:
> Hi Niels,
> 
> I agree with you that more openness and equality effort is needed here,
> however, I tend to find that remote participation in academic
> conferences is less common than that at Internet governance meetings,
> particularly the multi-stakeholder ones.
> 
> Now, since I will be participating at the conference (and talking about
> digital inequalities!), I will be happy to assist in setting up a simple
> one-venue remote participation channel if the organizers allowed this.
> 
> Regards,
> Hanna.
> 
> 
> On Monday, April 16, 2018, Niels ten Oever <lists at digitaldissidents.org
> <mailto:lists at digitaldissidents.org>> wrote:
> 
>     Hi Andrea,
> 
>     Thanks a lot for this, this looks like a _very_ useful and timely
>     conference, in which I would really like to participate. I think this
>     conference would also really benefit from hearing 'outside voices' (such
>     as the potential benefactors or target group of said capacity building).
> 
>     Therefore I was a bit confused that there will be no opportunity for
>     remote participation, which is quite common for academic conferences,
>     but really quite uncommon for Internet governance meetings.
> 
>     While the world is trying to address both inequalities and climate
>     change, it might be good to look at other ways to include people in the
>     conversation than through physical attendance?
> 
>     I think this is a broader discussion we should have in the academic
>     community (not dissimilar to open access), so I am sorry for bringing
>     this up specifically with regards to this conference.
> 
>     All the best,
> 
>     Niels
> 
> 
> 
>     On 04/13/2018 06:19 PM, Andrea Calderaro wrote:
>     > GIG-ARTS 2018 - The Second European Multidisciplinary Conference
>     on Global Internet Governance Actors, Regulations, Transactions and
>     Strategies
>     >
>     > 26-27 April 2018, Cardiff
>     >
>     > Overcoming Inequalities in Internet Governance: framing digital
>     policy capacity building strategies
>     >
>     > Organised by: Centre for Internet and Global Politics / School of
>     Law and Politics / Cardiff University
>     >
>     > In partnership with: DiploFoundation, The ECPR Standing Group on
>     Internet and Politics, The Global Internet Governance Academic
>     Network (GigaNet), IAMCR Communication Policy and Technology
>     Section, ICA Division Communication Law & Policy
>     >
>     > Conference Description
>     >
>     > After having explored “Global Internet Governance as a Diplomacy
>     Issue” at its first edition in Paris in 2007, the Second European
>     Multidisciplinary Conference on Global Internet Governance Actors,
>     Regulations, Transactions and Strategies (GIG-ARTS 2018) addresses
>     power inequalities in internet governance, and digital policy
>     capacity building strategies aiming at overcoming gaps in digital
>     policy developments.
>     >
>     > Connectivity infrastructure is constantly expanding, while
>     internet access is incessantly growing across countries, regions and
>     socio-political contexts. In this context, new and crucial questions
>     emerge from a governance and security perspective. As for the
>     latter, new connectivity calls for cybersecurity capacity building
>     strategies aiming at secure digital infrastructure. At the same
>     time, from a governance perspective, traditional powers in the
>     governance of the internet are increasingly challenged from newly
>     connected actors who demand more influence in the transnational
>     debate around digital policy development. As a result, despite
>     claims for equal representations and diversity since the first World
>     Summit on Information Society in 2003, the narrowing of the digital
>     divide opens new and key questions: Whether and what inequalities
>     exist in internet governance decision making? How is the rapidly
>     changing internet geography and sociography reflected in the
>     governance of the internet? Moreover, in order to increase awareness
>     and enhance involvement of newly connected countries in national and
>     transnational digital policy developments, what are the best
>     internet governance capacity building strategies available? How do
>     newly connected countries and actors build their digital policy
>     capacity, and do they develop an active role in the transnational
>     internet governance debate? Whether in newly or early connected
>     countries, various kinds of divides persist across socio-cultural
>     and political contexts, reflecting if not extending societal and
>     socio-economic inequalities. Are such renewed forms of inequalities
>     and discriminations adequately addressed in internet governance
>     debates? What are the requirements for digital policies to actually
>     empower people and uphold their individual and collective rights online?
>     >
>     > In order to answer these crucial and manifold questions, the
>     conference program includes more than 20 scholarly presentations and
>     contributions from policy makers from the European Commission, UK
>     Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Chatham House, International
>     Telecommunication Union (ITU), ICANN, UNESCO, DiploFoundation and
>     the Global Commission on the Stability of Cyberspace.
>     >
>     > The conference will also benefit from the contribution of
>     Professor JP Singh, Chair of Culture and Political Economy /
>     Director of the Centre for Cultural Relations at the University of
>     Edinburgh, and author of the forthcoming book Development 2.0:  How
>     Technologies Can Foster Inclusivity in the Developing World (Oxford
>     University Press), who will deliver the keynote speech.
>     >
>     > Please find more information about the program below, or via the
>     conference website: https://www-npa.lip6.fr/gig-arts/conference/
>     <https://www-npa.lip6.fr/gig-arts/conference/>
>     >
>     > Program Chair
>     > Andrea Calderaro
>     > Centre for Internet and Global Politics, University of Cardiff,
>     United Kingdom
>     >
>     > Program Committee
>     > William J. Drake, University of Zurich, Switzerland
>     > Marianne Franklin, Goldsmiths University
>     > Katharina Höne, DiploFoundation, Malta & Switzerland
>     > Nanette S. Levinson, American University Washington DC, USA
>     > Robin Mansell, London School of Economics and Political Science,
>     United Kingdom
>     > Meryem Marzouki, CNRS & Sorbonne Université, France
>     > Ben Wagner, UW Vienna, Austria
>     >
>     > GIG-ARTS 2018 Communication Details
>     > - Website: events.gig-arts.eu
>     <http://events.gig-arts.eu><http://events.gig-arts.eu/
>     <http://events.gig-arts.eu/>> | www.cigp.eu
>     <http://www.cigp.eu><http://www.cigp.eu/ <http://www.cigp.eu/>>
>     >
>     > Registration
>     > Limited number of seats are available, so please register by 20th
>     April:
>     > https://www-npa.lip6.fr/gig-arts/conference/registration/
>     <https://www-npa.lip6.fr/gig-arts/conference/registration/>
>     >
>     > Or, contact:
>     >
>     > - Conference Format: events at gig-arts.eu
>     <mailto:events at gig-arts.eu><mailto:events at gig-arts.eu
>     <mailto:events at gig-arts.eu>> | Andrea Calderaro
>     (CalderaroA at Cardiff.ac.uk
>     <mailto:CalderaroA at Cardiff.ac.uk><mailto:CalderaroA at Cardiff.ac.uk
>     <mailto:CalderaroA at Cardiff.ac.uk>>)
>     > - Logistics: Verity Marsterson (MarstersonVL at cardiff.ac.uk
>     <mailto:MarstersonVL at cardiff.ac.uk><mailto:MarstersonVL at cardiff.ac.uk <mailto:MarstersonVL at cardiff.ac.uk>>)
>     >
>     > Venue
>     > The conference will be held in Cardiff, the capital city of Wales,
>     at the Centre for Internet and Global Politics, hosted at Cardiff
>     University / School of Law and Politics.
>     >
>     > Address:           Cardiff University - Main Building / Park Pl -
>     CF10 3AT
>     >
>     >
>     >
>     > Conference program
>     >
>     > Day 1 – Thursday 26 April 2018
>     >
>     > 09:15-09:30     Welcome Session
>     >
>     > Andrea Calderaro (Cardiff University)
>     >
>     >
>     > 09:30-11:00     Session 1:Inequalities in Internet Governance
>     >
>     > Chair: Meryem Marzouki (CNRS France)
>     >
>     >
>     > -         Global Informal Governance, Non-State Actors, and Models
>     of National Policy-Making: Explaining Standard Developing
>     Organisation (SDO) Decisions Through Multiple Streams
>     >
>     > Alison Harcourt (Exeter University)
>     >
>     > -         Lost in (IANA) Transition: Inequalities and Discursive
>     Struggles Within The “Global Multistakeholder Community”
>     >
>     > Mauro Santaniello, Francesco Amoretti and Nicola Palladino
>     (University of Salerno)
>     >
>     > -         Participation Matters: Potential Effects of the IGF on
>     Internet Governance Capacity Building
>     >
>     > Dmitry Epstein (University of Illinois) and Brandie Nonnecke (UC
>     Berkeley)
>     >
>     >
>     > 11:00-11:30         Coffee Break
>     >
>     > 11:30-13:00     Session 2 – Cyber Capacity Building: Security
>     >
>     > Chair: Robin Mansell (London School of Economics)
>     >
>     > -         Cyber Security Capacity Building: Strengthening Policy
>     Advice
>     >
>     > Madeline Carr and Alex Chung (University College London), Atif
>     Hussain and Siraj Shaikh (Coventry University)
>     >
>     > -         Cyber Security a Shared Responsibility? The Role and
>     Likelihood of Public Private Partnerships in National Cyber-Security
>     Strategies as a Capacity Building Tool of Power Politics
>     >
>     > Madeleine Myatt and Detlef Sack (University of Bielefeld)
>     >
>     > -         Cyber Security Strategies: a Comparative Analysis
>     >
>     > Domenico Fracchiolla (LUISS University) and Mara Morini
>     (University of Genova)
>     >
>     > -         The Necessity and Pitfalls of Cybersecurity Capacity
>     Building for Norm Development in Cyberspace
>     >
>     > Zine Homburger (Leiden University)
>     >
>     >
>     > 13:00-14:30         Lunch Break
>     >
>     > 14:30-15:30         Roundtable: Politics and Policy of Cyber
>     Capacity Building
>     >
>     > Chair: Andrea Calderaro (Cardiff University)
>     >
>     > The cyber dimension is increasingly central in foreign policy, and
>     discussions around how to develop a sustainable internet
>     infrastructure have become key to regulatory strategies at the
>     transnational and national level. New levels of connectivity are
>     welcomed as opportunities, but also increase vulnerability from a
>     security and human rights perspective. Therefore, there is a growing
>     demand to securitize connectivity, which is at the center of urgent
>     demands to develop cyber capacity across actors, newly connected
>     countries and beyond. CCB Strategies will be discussed by:
>     >
>     > - Panagiota-Nayia Barmpaliou (European Commission, DG Int.
>     Cooperation & Dev.)
>     >
>     > - Robert Collett (UK Cabinet, Foreign and Commonwealth Office)
>     >
>     > - Emily Taylor (Chatham House)
>     >
>     > 15:30-16:00         Coffee Break
>     >
>     > 16:00-17:30     Session 3 – Cyber Capacity Building: Human Rights
>     >
>     > Chair: Ben Wagner (Vienna University of Economics and Business)
>     >
>     > -  The Repressive Potentials of Social Media Regulation: a Warning
>     From Turkey To the World
>     >
>     >    Sefa Ozalp, Chiara Poletti and Daniel Gray (Cardiff University)
>     >
>     > -   Content Control Contestations: Why Authoritarian States
>     Challenge the Internet Freedom Norm
>     >
>     >     Daniëlle Flonk (Hertie School of Governance)
>     >
>     > -    Two Generations of Online Speech Controls in Russia: from
>     Filtering and Blocking to Creating a Copy of the National Internet
>     Infrastructure?
>     >
>     >     Liudmila Sivetc (University of Turku)
>     >
>     >
>     > 18:00-18:30     Key Note Speech at the Wales National Museum
>     >
>     > Speaker: Professor JP Singh (University of Edinburg)
>     >
>     >
>     > 18:30-20:00     Conference Reception at the Wales National Museum
>     >
>     > Day 2 – Friday 27 April 2018
>     >
>     > 09:00-09:30     UNESCO’s “Internet Universality Indicators”
>     >
>     > Xianhong Hu (UNESCO)
>     >
>     >
>     > 09:30-11:00     Session 4 – Cyber Capacity Building: Economy and Trade
>     >
>     > Chair: William Drake (University of Zurich)
>     >
>     > -         WTO Digital Trade Discussions: Identifying the Way Forward
>     >
>     > Marilia Maciel, Jovan Kurbalija and Roxana Radu (DiploFoundation)
>     >
>     > -         Data Flows & National Security: a Conceptual Framework
>     to Assess Restrictions on Data Flows Under GATS Security Exception
>     >
>     > Martina Francesca Ferracane (University of Hamburg)
>     >
>     > -         The International Political Economy of Digital
>     Catching-Up: New Trade Agreements and Digital Latecomers
>     >
>     > Shamel Azmeh (University of Bath), Christopher Foster and Jaime
>     Echávarri Valdez (University of Sheffield)
>     >
>     > -         Towards a New Tech Meritocracy? World Society,
>     Technological Capacity and Participation in Global Internet Governance
>     >
>     > Thomas Winzen and David Weyrauch (Mannheim University)
>     >
>     >
>     > 11:00-11:30     Coffee Break
>     >
>     > 11:30-12:30     Roundtable: Power Struggles in Internet Governance
>     >
>     > Chair: Andrea Calderaro (Cardiff University)
>     >
>     > Discussions on how to enhance inclusiveness in digital policies
>     decision making processes has been at the centre of internet
>     governance debate since its origins. Enhanced connectivity has
>     however made it even more pressing that newly connected actors are
>     represented in the debate. As a result, there is an increasing need
>     to expose existing forms of inequalities and understand how they
>     impact on agenda setting and decision making capacities. Discussions
>     on internet governance inequalities and strategies to overcome this
>     gap will benefit from the contribution from:
>     >
>     > - Marilia Maciel (DiploFoundation / Global Commission on the
>     Stability of Cyberspace)
>     >
>     > - Andrea Beccalli (ICANN)
>     >
>     > - Mike Nxele (UN International Telecommunication Union - ITU)
>     >
>     > - Xianhong Hu (UNESCO)
>     >
>     > 12:30-14:00     Lunch Break
>     >
>     > 14:00-15:30     Session 5 – Identifying the gaps: Actors,
>     Diplomacy, and Regulation
>     >
>     > Chair: Katharina Höne (DiploFoundation)
>     >
>     > -          Big Data – Big Capacity Gaps? Towards Capacity Building
>     for Big Data in Diplomacy and Development Cooperation in the Context
>     of Small and Developing Countries
>     >
>     > Katharina Höne (DiploFoundation)
>     >
>     > -          Who Owns the Internet, and Why Does it Matter? An
>     Analysis of ISP Ownership in Africa
>     >
>     > Tina Freyburg, Lisa Garbe and Veronique Wavre (University of St.
>     Gallen)
>     >
>     > -          Artificial Limitations and Meaningful Access: How
>     Artificial Limitations on the Internet Affect Digital Inequalities
>     >
>     > Massimo Ragnedda and Hanna Kreitem (Northumbria University)
>     >
>     > -          Who direct Social Media governance? An empirical study
>     of actors performing the controversy around Social Media and content
>     regulation
>     >
>     > Chiara Poletti (Cardiff University)
>     >
>     > 15:30               Concluding Remarks
>     >
>     >
>     > -----------------------------------------------
>     > Andrea Calderaro, PhD
>     > Director Centre for Internet and Global Politics (CIGP)
>     > Director of PGR Politics & IR
>     > Lecturer in International Relations
>     > Department of Politics and International Relations | Cardiff
>     University
>     > -----------------------------------------------
>     > Personal page:
>     http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/people/view/330531-calderaro-andrea
>     <http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/people/view/330531-calderaro-andrea>
>     > Twitter: @andreacalderaro
>     >
>     > _______________________________________________
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> 
>     -- 
>     Niels ten Oever
>     Head of Digital
> 
>     Article 19
>     www.article19.org <http://www.article19.org>
> 
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-- 
Niels ten Oever
Head of Digital

Article 19
www.article19.org

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