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Conference announcement

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/programme/

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/> | 
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/

Or, contact:

- Conference Format: eve...@gig-arts.eu<mailto:eve...@gig-arts.eu> | Andrea 
Calderaro (caldera...@cardiff.ac.uk<mailto:caldera...@cardiff.ac.uk>)
- Logistics: Verity Marsterson 
(marsterso...@cardiff.ac.uk<mailto:marsterso...@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
Twitter: @andreacalderaro

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