The HSRC BRICS Seminar Series

2015-11-10 / Анонсы
The HSRC BRICS Seminar Series 
 
Web-seminar "Digital Liberty, the Knowledge Commons and some Challenges for the Governance of ICTs and the Internet for the BRICS"

The BRICS Research Centre together with the South African BRICS Think Tank will be hosting a seminar that will be delivered by Prof Rasigan Maharajh on the paper he submitted to the BRICS Academic Forum in Moscow in May 2015, titled “Digital Liberty, the Knowledge Commons and some Challenges for the Governance of ICTs and the Internet for the BRICS.

Speaker: Prof Rasigan Maharajh, Nodal Head of the Department of Science and Technology and National Research Foundation’ Centre of Excellence in Scientometrics and Science, Technology and Innovation Policy, and founding  Chief Director of the Institute for Economic Research on Innovation at Tshwane University of Technology

Venues in Pretoria, Durban and Cape Town (Videoconferencing facilities: see below)

Date:         10 November 2015

Time:        13:15 for 13:30  – 14H30  

On-line:    https://youtu.be/L3amT32k8G8?list=PLo1YzikRDAU1aD90h6WmgGInwiR_a2JUx

This Seminar will explore the challenges posed by the current dynamics in the political economy of ICTs and the Internet for Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS). The Seminar paper comprises four sections. After an introduction which broadly defines the domains and identifies the focus of the paper, our attention will shift to an exploration of some of the contemporary dynamics in the political economy of ICTs and the Internet, including some aspects of ICTs, Internet infrastructures, global knowledge and culture, and the debate concerning the governance of the Internet. Section three provides a brief economic history of ICTs and the Internet in the BRICS with a particular emphasis on South Africa. The fourth and concluding section synthesises the paper and recommends a strategic orientation appropriate to the progressive objectives articulated by the BRICS in working together and seeking to realise a better world-order for all.