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Project

Strengthening cyber policy research centres in the global South (Latin America and the Caribbean)
 

South America
West Indies
Project ID
108604
Total Funding
CAD 758,400.00
IDRC Officer
Ben Petrazzini
Project Status
Completed
End Date
Duration
24 months

Programs and partnerships

Networked Economies

Lead institution(s)

Project leader:
Judith Mariscal
Mexico

Summary

Networking technologies are increasingly at the heart of economic, social, and political activities. Yet while digital tools improve people’s ability to innovate, organize, document, and share, they are also used for surveillance, tracking, censorship, and repression.Read more

Networking technologies are increasingly at the heart of economic, social, and political activities. Yet while digital tools improve people’s ability to innovate, organize, document, and share, they are also used for surveillance, tracking, censorship, and repression. Policies and regulations are key both in amplifying technology’s role in economic and political empowerment and in ensuring its harms are restricted. New standards, skills, and applications are needed to enable digitally-driven development.

Leaders and policymakers, particularly in the Global South, generally lack the evidence and objective advice to develop effective regulation in the digital space. Yet, they are increasingly confronted with cyber threats (such as crime and terrorism), and they need to ensure that unstable or insecure digital environments do not undermine innovative potential. They must also balance these priorities with obligations to protect privacy and free expression.

However, there are few organizations in the Global South that have a specific research orientation on cyber policy issues, and there is a shortage of experts able to provide rigorous, evidence-based advice on cyber policy. While there are civil society organizations engaged in valuable advocacy, they often have little evidence to inform that advocacy or to conduct their research.

This project will support the efforts of Mexico-based Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas to strengthen research and policy capacity on critical cyber policy issues. It will facilitate the Centre to develop a robust cyber policy research agenda that addresses all facets of cyber policy, including human rights, security, innovation, and the interplay of these issues locally, regionally, and globally. It will build institutional capacity and sustainability to produce credible, legitimate, and locally-relevant research that convenes different perspectives on critical cyber policy issues. It will also help strengthen the Centre’s abilities to inform and influence policy development.

This will enable policy leaders to respond to the rapidly changing digital environment using objective, high quality research. It will also allow communities to benefit from the opportunities that digital innovation offers, including improved health, governance, education, and economic prospects, while shielding them as much as possible from the harmful aspects of the digital revolution.

Research outputs

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Report
Language:

English

Summary

The cyber policy center, Centro Latam Digital (CLD) is currently conducting research on misinformation, data protection and privacy, online work and education, including the gender gap, in online labor markets in the context of the Covid-19 crisis. The aim is to provide knowledge to policy makers who are facing the ongoing challenge of introducing effective policies and public services in response to the pandemic. This detailed report covers activities, outputs and outcomes of the past two years. CLD plays a critical role in shaping evidence-based digital policy that supports human rights, democracy, social inclusion and economic development at the local, national and regional levels.

Author(s)
Mariscal, Judith
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