[governance] Good examples of muiltistakeholder policy development at a national level?

Sheetal Kumar sheetal at gp-digital.org
Thu Oct 31 05:53:49 EDT 2019


Hi Ian,

There might be some useful examples in this report GPD "Multistakeholder
Approaches to National Cybersecurity Strategy Development" which draws on
on GPD’s own research into multistakeholder processes, and includes case
studies:
https://www.gp-digital.org/publication/multistakeholder-approaches-to-national-cybersecurity-strategy-development/

Best
Sheetal

On Wed, 30 Oct 2019 at 21:31, Ian Peter <ian.peter at ianpeter.com> wrote:

> Thanks everyone who responded so far - I was interested to learn that we
> do have some reasonable examples of government co-operating with civil
> society and private sector in policy development: at a national level- and
> to learn that cgi.br is still alive.
>
> We can debate forever what terms like "multistakeholderism", "enhanced
> co-operation", "respective roles" and "equal footing" mean, but I remain
> convinced that the only path to effective cooperation on the complex policy
> issues we face with the evolving internet will  be all parties working
> co-operatively on policy evolution - both within national borders, and also
> across these borders on a global basis.
>
> I should mention that my questions were prompted by attending Australia's
> Netthing event (https://netthing.org.au/). My impression after that was
> that the government here wanted to be seen to be co-operating with other
> stakeholders, but either was doing this in a tokenistic fashion or wasn't
> quite sure how to go about it. So some good examples from elsewhere might
> be very useful!
>
>
> Ian Peter
>
> ------ Original Message ------
> From: "Tamir" <tisrael at cippic.ca>
> To: governance at lists.riseup.net
> Sent: 31/10/2019 3:56:02 AM
> Subject: Re: [governance] Good examples of muiltistakeholder policy
> development at a national level?
>
> I can speak a bit to the Canadian IoT initiative.
>
> This process was largely guided/hosted by ISOC, CIRA (our ccTLD) and ISED,
> which is our industry/innovation department. The process went really well,
> and the government participants definitely engaged on equal footing.
>
> There were also government officials, civil society reps and business reps
> in the actual working groups that drove most of the work. There too, it was
> definitely an equal footing exchange.
>
> Best regards,
> Tamir
>
> On 2019-10-30 12:51 p.m., Joly MacFie wrote:
>
> The Canada IoT Security process, fostered by ISOC's NA Bureau, appeared to
> be a success https://iotsecurity2018.ca/
>
> Here is video of Larry Strickling's introductory comments
> https://livestream.com/internetsociety/12days08/
>
> Larry, incidentally, has left ISOC to work as Policy Director for US
> Presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg
>
>  joly
>
> On Tue, Oct 29, 2019 at 4:42 PM Ian Peter <ian.peter at ianpeter.com> wrote:
>
>> I am interested to know of examples of nation states that might have
>> reasonable to good practices for involving civil society and the private
>> sector in internet related policy development, along the lines perhaps of
>> the ancient WSIS definition of "on an equal footing".
>>
>> Is anyone doing this this other than in a token fashion? A few years ago
>> we had a good example with Brazil, but a change of government changed that.
>> What are our good examples now, or don't they exist?
>>
>> Ian
>> ---
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>
>
> --
> ---------------------------------------------------------------
> Joly MacFie  218 565 9365 Skype:punkcast
> --------------------------------------------------------------
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>
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> --
> 
> Tamir Israel
> Staff Lawyer
>
> Samuelson-Glushko Canadian Internet Policy & Public Interest Clinic
> (CIPPIC)
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-- 


*Sheetal Kumar*
Programme Lead | GLOBAL PARTNERS DIGITAL
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