Shared Responsibility: Towards More Inclusive Internet Governance
This report explores two scenarios for the future of Internet governance, analyzing opportunities and threats to inform policy recommendations.
(Generated with the help of GPT-4)
Quick Facts | |
---|---|
Report location: | source |
Language: | English |
Publisher: | Global Governance Futures |
Publication date: | July 1, 2015 |
Authors: | Aasim Khan, Jonah Force Hill, Julia Pohle, Parminder Pal Singh Sandhu, Parminder Sandhu, Runhui Lin, Seth Oppenheim, Taejun Shin |
Time horizon: | 2025 |
Geographic focus: | Global |
Page count: | 25 |
Methods
The research method involved scenario planning, identifying critical factors influencing Internet governance, conducting a cross-impact balance analysis, and developing two contrasting scenarios. Opportunities and threats were assessed to formulate policy recommendations.
(Generated with the help of GPT-4)
Key Insights
The report examines the future of Internet governance through two scenarios, “Cyber Davos” and “Google Shock,” to address challenges in managing the Internet's technological, political, economic, and social dimensions. It assesses the potential impacts of these scenarios on global cooperation, market structures, and cyber confrontations, offering strategic policy recommendations to shape a more inclusive and secure Internet governance landscape.
(Generated with the help of GPT-4)
Additional Viewpoints
Categories: 2015 publication year | 2020s time horizon | 2025 time horizon | English publication language | Global geographic scope | civil society | communications technology | corporate influence | cyber conflicts | economic inequality | intergovernmental processes | internet | internet governance | market structures | multistakeholder model | us-china relations | user participation