Main Page: Difference between revisions
Line 35: | Line 35: | ||
Rapport du Forum National Sénégalais sur la Gouvernance de l'Internet / Report of Senegal national internet governance forum | Rapport du Forum National Sénégalais sur la Gouvernance de l'Internet / Report of Senegal national internet governance forum | ||
* [https://www.cdt.org/policy/itus-wcit-negotiation-internet-governance-or-just-governing-internet The ITU’s WCIT Negotiation: Internet Governance, or Just Governing the Internet?] | * [https://www.cdt.org/policy/itus-wcit-negotiation-internet-governance-or-just-governing-internet The ITU’s WCIT Negotiation: Internet Governance, or Just Governing the Internet?] From the Centre for Democracy and Tecnology's policy analysis on WCIT and internet governance, June 2012 | ||
Centre for Democracy and Tecnology's policy analysis on WCIT and internet governance, June 2012 | |||
* [http://wcitleaks.org/resources/ WCITLeaks page of policy analyses and other resources for CS globally] | * [http://wcitleaks.org/resources/ WCITLeaks page of policy analyses and other resources for CS globally] |
Revision as of 10:36, 3 October 2012
African Civil Society Conversation on Internet Governance
Join the conversation
Where Discussion is on a mailing list. You can participate in English or French. We will post weekly summaries of the discussion in English and French.
When The discussion space will be open from 11 September to 31 December 2012.
How Go to: https://lists.apc.org/mailman/listinfo/africs-ig and subscribe to the list.
Purpose
This purpose of this site and the linked mailing list is to serve as a platform that will help garner African civil society's views and contributions to ICT policy and internet governance issues and processes, with a special focus on the World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT) and the proposed review of the International Telecommunications Regulations (ITRs) that will take place in December 2012. This process is being facilitated by the Association for Progressive Communications.
Goal
The goal of this undertaking is to build awareness, understanding and engagement among African civil society organisations around the WCIT, the proposed revisions to the ITRs and the 'state' of internet governance from more broadly. It is hoped that this platform will facilitate and further African civil society's engagement with internet governance processes at national, regional and global levels while enabling them to contribute to shaping the future development of the internet and telecommunications.
Objective
Develop specific objectives for improvements of internet governance from an African perspective and to promote African access to and participation in the development of the internet.
Background materials and resources
Please send proposals for materials to mawaki [at] apc.org.
Below are links to documents and resources that are intended to inform African CS constituents as well as all participants in this discussion about the contexts and the issues related to internet governance and the review process of the international telecommunication regulations.
ITU Document, Source Africa Region, June 2012]]
Rapport du Forum National Sénégalais sur la Gouvernance de l'Internet / Report of Senegal national internet governance forum
- The ITU’s WCIT Negotiation: Internet Governance, or Just Governing the Internet? From the Centre for Democracy and Tecnology's policy analysis on WCIT and internet governance, June 2012
WCITleaks.org is a website that is dedicated to find and make public ITU's documents related to the WCIT and ITRs' revision processes. Related policy analyses may be found at the page linked above.
The current ITRs from the Final Acts of the World Administrative Telegraph and Telephone Conference, Melbourne 1988 (Published in Geneva, 1989).
Activities linked to this discussion
- African IGF
- West Africa IGF http://www.waigf.org/
- Central Africa IGF http://www.fgi-ac.org/
- Southern African IGF http://www.ngopulse.org/saigf
- Highway Africa http://www.highwayafrica.com/
- BestBits Civil Society Meeting, Baku, 3-4 November 2012 http://igcaucus.org:9001/p/BestBits
About the Association for Progressive Communications
The Association for Progressive Communications (APC), established in 1990, is an international network of civil society organisations dedicated to empowering and supporting groups and individuals working for peace, human rights, improved governance, development and environmental sustainability, through the strategic use of the internet and other information and communication technologies (ICTs).