Do ICANN’s policies and operations have an impact on human rights? Civil society engagement in the organisation seeks to inscribe human rights in internet infrastructure.
Narrow down on Keyword
- (-) Remove Bottom-up design filter Bottom-up design
- Civil society (1) Apply Civil society filter
- Human rights (1) Apply Human rights filter
- Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) (1) Apply Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) filter
- Sociotechnical imaginaries (1) Apply Sociotechnical imaginaries filter
Actors
Stakeholder
Internet Policy Review is an open access and peer-reviewed journal on internet regulation.
Scholars, regulators, journalists, activists, and other stakeholders publish in the journal in
- Research articles
- In-depth scholarly research papers and essays
- Concepts
- Critical reflections on emerging core concepts of the digital society
- Editorials
- Contextual or thematic introductions to special issues
- Essays
- Free-form yet in-depth contentions with issues of academic or social relevance
- News
- Journalistic reports on events of interest to the Internet Policy Review community
- Opinions
- Opinion pieces commenting on developments in the realm of internet policy
- Open Abstract
- Extended abstracts for works in progress that receive public peer review
peer reviewed
not peer reviewed
Connect
Follow us @POLICYR
emailSubscribe NEWSLETTER