IT for Change has been a key resource centre supporting developing country engagements in global Internet governance forums, in the post-WSIS phase. Through periodic policy briefs, we have examined the rapidly evolving social, economic and cultural implications of Internet related debates most relevant to developing countries.
The first in this series “A development agenda for the Internet", was produced as a background paper for the IBSA meeting on IG in Rio, in 2011, and was noted in the IBSA summit statement.
The second, “A fork in the road to the future of Internet governance”, was written in 2014 in response to the launch of the Net Mundial Initiative. It highlights how the future of Internet governance is precariously poised at a juncture where the road we choose to follow will determine whether we have a democratic governance framework for the Internet, or post-democratic arrangements based on a global elite compact.
The third, “Global Internet governance: A developing country perspective”, also written in 2014, highlights how a South-centred Internet governance paradigm would foreground the idea of the Internet as a public utility and as a global commons. It was published by Third World Network, the premier civil society advocacy group on Southern issues.
The fourth, “Developing Countries in the emerging global digital order”, written in 2017, speaks to the geo-economics of the emerging digital economy characterized by an unequal distribution of data resources and digital intelligence between the North and the South. It is slated to be published by South Centre, Geneva.