Dear colleagues,

here is the final draft of our workshop on 8 March 2016. If you have any 
questions about the event please do not hesitate to contact [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>.

Best regards,
Ben Wagner


Workshop Program: Internet Policy in Eastern Partnership Countries - #IPEP16

March 8, 2016, 10:00 – 18.00
European University Viadrina, Frankfurt (Oder)
Senatssaal (HG 109), Main Building

Open to the public. To register email: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

10:00 – 10:30   Welcoming remarks
- Alexander Wöll, President of European University Viadrina
- Joanna Bronowicka and Ben Wagner, European University Viadrina

10:00 – 12:00   Russian, EU and global perspectives on internet policy
- Points of tension: Russia, the West and the Rest, Madeline Carr, Cardiff 
University
- Russian perspective on internet policy, Agnieszka Bryc, Nicolaus Copernicus 
University in Toruń
- Framing the EU in the global Internet Governance debate, Andrea Calderaro, 
Cardiff University

12.00 – 13:30   Lunch break

13.30 – 15.30   Country perspectives from Ukraine and Armenia
- Internet Policy of Ukraine: From Diverse Vectors Strategy Ahead Towards 
Holistic Approach, Professor Andrii Paziuk, Taras Shevchenko National 
University of Kyiv
- The Role of Civil Society in Promoting the Internet Freedom Agenda in 
Ukrainian Internet Governance Discourse, Tetyana Lokot, University of Maryland 
- Armenian experience on Internet Governance: Achievements and Challenges, 
Samvel Martitosyan, Institute for Strategic and Innovative Research

15.30 – 16.00   Coffee break

16.00 – 18.00   Internet Policy in the Eastern Partnership
- Media freedom and Internet policy in Eastern Parnership countries, Aidar 
Botagarov, Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
- Thinking from the Edges: Internet Policy in Eastern Partnership Countries, 
Joanna Bronowicka, European University Viadrina

About the workshop
To understand global human rights challenges of the digital age, we need to 
know more how Internet policies are developed at the national level. We think 
it is particularly important to research internet policies in countries, which 
are at the borders of large geopolitical systems. At the periphery of the 
global system, internet policy is often not so strongly institutionalised as a 
result of which human rights norms are more in flux.

At this workshop, we want to take a closer look at internet polices in the 
Eastern Partnership countries: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, 
and Ukraine. Torn between two large geopolitical block, those six countries are 
very vulnerable to the growing mistrust between Brussels and Moscow. Strong 
trade and investment links to both Russia and Europe force them to make 
decisions, which can be politically hard and economically costly.

Internet policy is one of the areas most affected by competing human rights 
discourses and trade interests. Our working hypothesis is that geopolitics will 
affect how Internet policy is developed, but can be mitigated by other economic 
or social factors, such as the strength of actors from private sector or civil 
society.

This workshop is organized by the Centre for the Internet and Human Rights in 
collaboration with the B/ORDERS IN MOTION Centre, both at European University 
Viadrina. CIHR is a vibrant hub for academic research about technology and 
society at Viadrina. Our goal is to inform current public and academic debates 
by producing high-quality research grounded in theory and empirical data. 

You can find out more information about the project on CIHR website: cihr.eu 
<http://cihr.eu/>
--
Dr. Ben Wagner
Centre for Internet & Human Rights
European University Viadrina 
https://cihr.eu <https://cihr.eu/>

Twitter: @benwagne_r
Office: +49 335 5534 2832
Mobile: +49 170 110 2881
GPG Key Id: 494604B0A3479DBB

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