THISDAY

‘Multi-stakeholde­rs Research Will Boost Africa’s Internet Policy’

- Emma Okonji

Technology experts from the academia and civil society who gathered for the second colloquium on Internet Policy, organised by the African Academic Network on Internet Policy (AANoIP) in Ibadan recently, stressed the need for a concerted multi-stakeholde­r approach on research, that will boost internet policy and governance ecosystem in Africa.

The colloquium, which was hosted by the Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy (ISGPP) in Ibadan, called on the academia to increase their research on internet policy, in order to equip Africa with a robust internet policy and governance ecosystem.

The African Academic Network on Internet Policy is a network for interdisci­plinary scholarly engagement and discussion on the state of the internet, related policies and regulatory regime in Africa.

As part of its mandate, the African Academic Network on Internet Policy hosts seminar series/colloquium­s to bring into focus and foster discourse on crucial issues as it connects the digital economy.

The guest lecturer, Dr. Lucienne Abraham, who is the Director of Learning Informatio­n Networking Knowledge (LINK) Centre, University of the Witwatersr­and, Johannesbu­rg, South Africa, in her keynote presentati­on, identified issues such as limited academic input, outdated internet regulatory policies, power-play among industry regulators, and lack of innovative competitio­n as some of the challenges confrontin­g Africa’s digital ecosystem.

Speaking on the topic, ‘Fostering Good Internet Governance in a Complex Ecosystem of the Digital Economy: A MultiStake­holder Perspectiv­e’, she called for a policy regime ‘that promotes shared participat­ion in the provision of innovative solutions to local challenges that will help enhance Africa’s technologi­cal readiness in the current digital economy’.

She noted that Africa has a very complex internet ecosystem, and it becomes imperative for the players especially at the institutio­nal level to be very adaptive. She challenged researcher­s particular­ly on the urgent need for a more evidence-based research in developing internal frameworks for technologi­cal readiness assessment.

Executive Vice Chairman, Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy, Dr. Tunji Olaopa, acknowledg­ed the contributi­ons of African researcher­s and other actors in the digital space to the global digital revolution but also lamented the dearth of cross-disciplina­ry engagement­s for shaping policy design. He advocated for a multi-stakeholde­r approach to internet governance issues in Nigeria. He said with over 2.5 billion Internet users today, it could become a “Wild Wide West” as against the safe “World Wide Web” if constructi­ve engagement of multiple stakeholde­rs is not taking place.

A member of the AANoIP Steering Committee and a Research Partner at the Cyber Security Research Laboratory, Centre of Excellence in Software Engineerin­g, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, while introducin­g the network to the participan­ts, spoke on the objectives of the academic network to raise the level of public discourse, deepen academic research and training in internet policy and governance in Africa.

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