Towards a Humanistic Conception of Cyberspace. A Twofold Challenge for Netizens Mobilizing for a Democratic Internet Governance
Fecha
2009-01Autor
Pavan, Elena
Senges, Max
Komaitis, Konstantinos
Metadatos
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Our paper critically addresses the involvement and the role of civil
society entities in new participatory forms of governance, using the Internet
governance (IG) debate as a case study. The Internet is first and foremost a
global public space potentially available to everyone for the pursuit of the most
heterogeneous interests. As this global space becomes crucial in everyday life
and consequences of interests pursuit within it capillary innerve the offline
dimension, new forms of governance are required to ensure that all stakeholders
are represented and actively involved in the management and development of
what can be conceptualized as a common pool resource (CPR). The commons
of the Internet space and its service as a CPR necessitate the involvement of
various competencies that are dispersed in intelligence networks to which
private sector and civil society necessary belong. In particular, we examine the
meaning and the potential for the inclusion of civil society entities in this debate
in relation to the achievement of a universal (and not only global) Internet and
the consolidation of a humanized conception of IG. To this end, we propose an
analytical division of IG space in four sub-sectors (social commons;
information and service commons; price commons; infrastructure commons)
and we argue that civil society groups participation should be contextualized
and actions modulated following this dissection of competence and eligibility
spheres. Furthermore, the effort to achieve a democratic internet governance
translates into a double challenge for civil society groups: on the one hand,
occasions of direct influence must be fully exploited modulating actions in a
way that overcomes the inherent heterogeneity characterizing public interests
entities; on the other, a humanized vision has to be built up and consolidated in
the IG field in order to provide a set of benchmarks dynamically interacting
with market and traditional policy making logics. Finally, we will also explore
the effect that the construction and the consolidation of a humanized perspective
on IG will have in the translation of this domain from a mostly technical matter
into a seed in an emerging field of contention built around information and
communication issues.
Colecciones
- 2009 fascicula1 nr1 [29]