Internet Governance on the move

INTERNET GOVERNANCE – THE YEAR OF INSTITUTIONAL EVOLUTION:
from ‘NetMundial’ to the US Government IANA oversight transition was held Wednesday 22nd October 2014 organised by INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF COMMUNICATIONS UK CHAPTER EVENT in association with THE INTERNET SOCIETY ENGLAND (ISOC-E) and THE LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS MEDIA POLICY PROJECT.

Hosted at London School of Economics and Political Science
Houghton Street, London


Webcast recording link:

The Webcast : https://new.livestream.com/internetsociety/IGonthemove

Recording links are:

Full recording on You Tube:

Streaming recording link: https://isoc.webex.com/isoc/ldr.php?RCID=f12a6f0889239922cb92948ce69287c8

Download recording link: https://isoc.webex.com/isoc/lsr.php?RCID=14e7e4db529349d857984f9e68f350e3

The UK England chapter organised Webex remote participation and a camera that streamed to the Web for remote viewing of the WebCast.

Archive invitation
Internet Governance On The Move

Wednesday, 22 October 2014
17:00 | GMT Summer Time (London, GMT+01:00) | 3 hr

Join WebEx meeting

Meeting number: 926 802 285
Meeting password: ig2014

Join by phone
+44-203-478-5287 UK Call-in-toll number
+1-650-479-3208 Call-in toll number (US/Canada)
Access code: 926 802 285
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Invitation

INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF COMMUNICATIONS
UK CHAPTER EVENT

in association with

THE INTERNET SOCIETY ENGLAND (ISOC-E) and
THE LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS MEDIA POLICY PROJECT

INTERNET GOVERNANCE – THE YEAR OF INSTITUTIONAL EVOLUTION:
from ‘NetMundial’ to the US Government IANA oversight transition

Registration Form 22 oct UK Chapter in PDF format

Registration Form 22 oct UK Chapter MS Office format

Registration Form 22 oct UK Chapter in Open Office Format

Wednesday 22 October 2014, 1700 start

Hosted at London School of Economics and Political Science
Houghton Street, London

Dear Sir/Madam,

The past year has been rich in developments around the governance of the Internet. But 2015 looks set to be the year when the way the Internet is governed changes radically, forever.

Over the past couple of years, as the Internet has grown to reach a diverse user population of 3 billion people across the globe, and in the wake of the WikiLeaks and NSA revelations, there has been a heightened realization by the general public and the powers that be of the political importance of the Internet, and how it affects every single one of us, our economies and our societies.

One of the fruits of this deepening debate has been a positive effort: the ‘Net Mundial’ conference led by Brazilian President Roussef, which gathered thousands of representatives of governments, civil society, businesses and the technical community in April this year. The conference agreed, through ‘rough consensus’, a “declaration of Internet principles” and a “roadmap for the evolution of Internet Governance”. This evolution straddles areas from cybersecurity to the future of the Internet Governance Forum, to privacy and access to knowledge.

Among the main topics of discussion at NetMundial, there was much talk about the so-called ‘IANA stewardship transition’. Marking a historical development for a technology that was born in the United States as part of an academic effort funded by the government, the US administration took the initiative in March this year by announcing its readiness to transition its oversight of the core domain name system functions performed by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), to the ‘global stakeholder community’. After further discussions during the ICANN Meeting in London late June, a coordination group is now in place to take forward this transition and shape how the oversight of the Internet (the domain name system, IETF and RIRs) might look like without direct US Government ‘backstop’.

Together with the upcoming ITU Plenipotentiary Conference, and the 2015 year review of the UN World Summit on the Information Society, this makes for an interesting year ahead. What will the map of Internet Governance look like in a couple of years’ time? Where and how will global issues of Internet policy be discussed, from new domain names to net neutrality and other online freedoms? What is ‘the global multi-stakeholder community’ and how should it oversee the basic governance structures for the Internet? What is the UK’s role and place in this evolution? We will aim to answer some of these questions with a prominent panel of experts, moderated by moderator by Professor Robin Mansell of the LSE.

Key participants include:

• Sarah Taylor, Deputy Director, Creative Economy, Internet, International, DCMS
• Martin Boyle, Nominet and Member of the International Coordination Group for the transition of the IANA oversight
• Andrew Puddephat, Global Partners Digital and European Council of Foreign Relations
• Malcolm Hutty, Head of Public Affairs, London Internet Exchange (LINX).

Further information available from Laura Courbet. The event is free and to register, please return the attached form to l.courbet@iicom.org with UKCHIG-14 in the subject heading.

For IIC membership details please go to www.iicom.org. Contact Tel: +44 (0)20 8947 3535.

For ISOC members please see our membership page

With best wishes,
Andrea

Andrea Millwood Hargrave
Director General
International Institute of Communications
Email: a.millwood-hargrave at iicom.org
Mobile: +44 7793 201 498

The International Institute of Communications has moved to:
International Institute of Communications
The Glasshouse
177-187 Arthur Road
London SW19 8AE

Tel: +44 (0) 20 8947 3535 / Fax: +44 (0) 20 8944 6083
Our email addresses are unchanged.

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