LACIGF 14

The event was  helded in virtual format.

To maintain regional dialogue, LACIGF 14 will be held in virtual format on 23-24 November 2021, with a reduced program.

Simultaneous interpretation into Spanish, English and Portuguese will be available.

Inscription

Agenda

TUESDAY 23 NOVEMBER

Time (UTC) Topic
14:15 - 14:·30
Opening
14:30 - 16:00

Update on National and Regional Internet Initiatives and the Youth IGF

18:00 - 19:30

The role of technology in situations of tension in democratic regimes: How can internet governance contribute to the deployment of technology with a fundamental rights approach?

The recent pandemic and political and social upheavals in the region have highlight the role that technology and information (communicated and disseminated over the internet) can play in confronting a crisis. At the same time, recent experience shows how digital technologies can accentuate the risks of control and exclusion through mass, normalized surveillance under the pretext of a crisis.

This LACIGF session seeks to contribute to an understanding of the current challenges related to how a fundamental rights approach can be promoted in the deployment of technologies in crisis situations, as opposed to the idea that guarantees should be suspended in these scenarios, showing the contribution that can be made from an Internet governance perspective to ensure the legality, necessity, and proportionality of the technological deployments that are adopted to help mitigate crisis scenarios. During the session, different points of view and examples will be shared regarding:

  • The type of deployments that have been developed in the region as a result of the different crises that have been experienced, including the health crisis in the context of the pandemic, crises motivated by political disruption processes, institutional crises focused on social demands, and economic crises derived from political and social instability;
  • What the various stakeholders can contribute for the development of technological responses that are more in line with the exercise of fundamental rights; and
  • Transparency and accountability mechanisms for the different stakeholders in relation to the different processes for digital technology development and utilization.

Format: Multistakeholder panel where the various actors can each share their perspective

20:00 - 21:30

Opportunities for the integration of the regional digital economy

The global economy is currently a digitized economy. The development of the Latin American and Caribbean digital ecosystem involves significant local and national challenges, such as the deployment of connectivity networks and the expansion of access, but also challenges that require a transnational perspective because of the very nature the Internet, which transcends geographical barriers.

The region offers great opportunities for the digital economy to grow, supported on the deployment of more and better networks and on transnational agreements that promote integration and trade. This growth, however, is currently hindered by different barriers.

These barriers may be of logistic, bureaucratic, due to lack of legal and regulatory harmonization, or the result of a lack of infrastructure. In many cases, regulatory regimes have not been adapted to the advances of new technologies. Dialogue through supranational forums and with the participation of public and private actors, the technical community, civil society, and academia is essential to better understand in which direction we should advance and how we should move forward.

Today, multiple commercial negotiation and regional integration processes can be identified where clauses related to the digital economy are discussed and sometimes included. In both the Mercosur and the Pacific Alliance, progress has been made towards agreements on digital policy issues. In addition, certain countries such as Mexico and Chile have entered into digital agreements that transcend Latin America (USMCA and DEPA, respectively). At the same time, these issues are being discussed on global scenarios.

____

  • Moderator - Alejandro Patiño - CEPAL
 
Speakers
 
  • Francisco Molina - Secretaría de Economía - México
  • Eduardo Chomali - CAF
  • Sissi De la Peña - ALAI
  • Ariel Graizer - LAC-IX 
  • Kemly Camacho - Sula Batsu  - Costa Rica 
  • Fernando López Gutiérrez -  ASIET 
  •  

WEDNESDAY 24 NOVEMBER

Time (UTC) Topic
14:30 - 16:·00

Effective collaboration models for internet governance: the case of shared resources

This session will present different cases, projects, and collaboration models of a multistakeholder nature that have been developed in relation to the management of shared Internet resources. The panel will explore the main characteristics identified in effective regional collaboration cases.

The governance of shared Internet resources allows analyzing how the multistakeholder model takes on a specific format for a variety of cases and problems.

Format: Multistakeholder panel

18:00 - 19:30

Universal access and inclusion at the social, economic, and human rights level: How can we arrive at a positive diagnosis to define common lines of work for the various stakeholders?

Considering the obstacles, barriers, and disadvantages that access and inclusion represent for the different sectors and which have increased globally due to the pandemic, stakeholders must agree on common lines of work to reverse their negative effects.

To do so, each stakeholder, in their own role, will present their status with respect to these issues, and mention the diagnosis they have reached and how, together, they can create specific lines of work, with incentives and concrete instruments to attain them and promote access and inclusion, reaching a consensus based on the trust that exists between them.

This consensus will serve as an input for explaining this aspect to the IGF, specifying its goal of reaching everyone and reducing any existing rifts and divides.

_______

Speakers

  • Nathalia Foditsch, Senior Policy and Regulatory Specialist, Alliance for an Affordable Internet (A4ia)
  • Virginia Pardo, Director of the Information Society Area of ​​the Agency for Electronic Government, Information Society and Knowledge (Agesic)
  • Carlos Martínez Cagnazzo, LACNIC Technology Manager
  • Matías Dodel, Catholic University of Uruguay
  • Raúl Echeberría, Executive Director of the Latin American Internet Association (ALAI)
  • Claudia Valdivia, President of Internet for All
20:00 - 21:30

The future of LACIGF

21:30 - 21:45

Closing remarks