Hi Lib Tech, see announcement below

University of Toronto’s Canada Centre and Citizen Lab Announce the Cyber 
Stewards Program

The Canada Centre for Global Security Studies (Canada Centre) and the Citizen 
Lab at the Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto (with the 
support of the International Development Research Centre (IDRC)) are pleased to 
announce the launch of the Cyber Stewards program.  

The Cyber Stewards program is designed to address the urgent need to support 
South-based cyber security scholars, advocates, and practitioners to articulate 
a vision of cyber security in which rights and openness are protected on the 
basis of shared research and empirical knowledge.

Cyber Stewards will be selected from across the global South. They will work 
locally while networking globally through the auspices of the Canada Centre and 
Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto. 

Cyber Stewards will define their own scope of work and activities based on 
their local context and pressing concerns. The expectation will be that Cyber 
Stewards will map, analyze, and ultimately impact the cyber security priorities 
of their own countries and regions on the basis of shared knowledge and 
practices.  

“We are excited about this opportunity, and the prospects that the Cyber 
Stewards network can accomplish,” says Ron Deibert, Director of the Canada 
Centre and Citizen Lab. “Working together, we envision the Cyber Stewards will 
help contribute to a growing global movement of citizens, scholars and 
practitioners - a community of practice - whose aim is to protect cyberspace as 
a secure but open commons of information in which human rights are respected.”

Detailed Overview

As cyberspace expands and deepens in the global South, there are growing 
concerns around how cyberspace will be governed and constituted.  The security 
of cyberspace is now an urgent concern. A cyber arms race among governments and 
non-state actors has begun in earnest. Facing a growing number of threats, from 
cyber crime to espionage and warfare, governments are developing ambitious 
cyber security strategies, some of which include far-reaching and potentially 
ominous censorship, surveillance, and information operation components. 

Unless proper checks and balances are instituted locally, there will continue 
to be strong pressures to build “surveillance-by design” into newly built 
infrastructure -- particularly the newly emerging mobile and social media 
ecosystems.  These troubling trends of information control and securitization 
portend the gradual disintegration of an open and secure commons of information 
on a global scale. 

It is essential that the process of cyber securitization taking place in the 
South includes local voices who can articulate a vision of cyber security in 
which rights and openness are protected on the basis of shared research and 
empirical knowledge.  

The aim of the Cyber Stewards project is to help support and develop those 
local voices.

Why “Steward”? Stewardship is typically defined as an  ethic of responsible 
behaviour in a situation  of shared resources, typically with respect to the 
natural environment and the commons, such  as the oceans and outer space.  
Although cyberspace is more of a mixed pooled resource that cuts across public 
and private sector than a commons per se, the concept of stewardship still 
carries considerable merit: it implies behaviour that goes beyond self-interest 
to accomplish something in the service of a wider public good.  It emphasizes 
the need for balance and the appreciation of the complexity of the system.  It 
carries with it a connotation of custodianship and citizen-based monitoring, 
all of which mesh with the aims of the network we are setting out to build.

Why should South-based scholars and practitioners link up with a North-based 
institution, like the University of Toronto? Moving forward, it is imperative 
that stewards of cyberspace include representation from all stakeholders in the 
global communications environment, and that bridges are built between 
communities across North, South, East and West.  Although the challenges of 
each locality are unique, together we live in a shared communications space 
that is becoming increasingly dense and interconnected. We have a shared 
responsibility to sustain that space in a manner that supports everyone’s 
rights, while keeping it secure. Networking South-based Cyber Stewards with the 
University of Toronto’s Canada Centre and Citizen Lab’s already existing 
network of collaborative partnerships will help accomplish that goal and 
hopefully build a broad community of global Cyber Stewards that empowers us all 
collectively.

Who will make up the Cyber Stewards program and how will it operate? There will 
be a diversity in research topics and methods, as well as regional and 
disciplinary backgrounds, in the constitution of Cyber Stewards. We anticipate 
that the group will form a network of peers, in which the Cyber Stewards 
regularly interact with each other, engage in knowledge sharing and joint 
research and development, and mutual mentorship.  Cyber Stewards will interact 
virtually as well as through occasional joint workshops and major conferences, 
facilitated by the Canada Centre and Citizen Lab.

Interested parties from any of the following regions should send a CV and a 
five page outline that details project ideas to cyberstewa...@citizenlab.org 
(Central America, Caribbean, South America, sub-Saharan Africa, Middle East and 
North Africa, and Asia).

About the Canada Centre for Global Security Studies
The Canada Centre for Global Security Studies at the Munk School of Global 
Affairs is a centre of interdisciplinary research, policy development, and 
other activities in emerging security issues that are critical to Canada's 
future. Established in spring 2010 with a grant from the Government of Canada, 
the Canada Centre's areas of interdisciplinary study include cyber security, 
global health, food security, and region-specific concerns, such as the future 
of the Arctic, post-Soviet Europe, the new Asian powers, and the changing face 
of the Americas.

About the Citizen Lab
The Citizen Lab is an interdisciplinary laboratory based at the Munk School of 
Global Affairs at the University of Toronto, Canada focusing on advanced 
research and development at the intersection of digital media, global security, 
and human rights.

We are a “hothouse” that combines the disciplines of political science, 
sociology, law, computer science, engineering, and graphic design. Our mission 
is to undertake advanced research and engage in development that monitors, 
analyses, and impacts the exercise of political power in cyberspace. We 
undertake this mission through collaborative partnerships with leading edge 
research centers, organizations, and individuals around the world, and through 
a unique “mixed methods” approach that combines technical analysis with 
intensive field research, qualitative social science, and legal and policy 
analysis methods undertaken by subject matter experts.  

The Citizen Lab’s ongoing research network includes the OpenNet Initiative, 
OpenNet Eurasia, and Opennet.Asia as well as the Cyber Security Stewards 
network. The Citizen Lab was a founding partner of the Information Warfare 
Monitor (2002-2012). The Citizen Lab developed the original design of the 
Psiphon censorship circumvention software, which spun out of the lab into a 
private Canadian corporation (Psiphon Inc.) in 2008.

Ronald Deibert
Director, the Citizen Lab 
and the Canada Centre for Global Security Studies
Munk School of Global Affairs
University of Toronto
(416) 946-8916
PGP: http://deibert.citizenlab.org/pubkey.txt
http://deibert.citizenlab.org/
twitter.com/citizenlab
r.deib...@utoronto.ca



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