Internet Governance
Infrastructure and Institutions
Bygrave, Lee A. (Editor),
Associate Professor, Department of Private Law, University of Oslo.
Bing, Jon (Editor),
Professor, Norwegian Research Center for Computers and Law (NRCCL), University of Oslo
Print publication date: 2009
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: May 2009 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-956113-1 doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199561131.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
This book provides an exposition of key issues in the development, steering, and management of the Internet. Much of its focus is on the governance of the infrastructure for Internet communication, particularly data transmission protocols, protocol addresses, and corresponding domain names. It also maps the development and application of core principles of network design for the Internet. A recurrent theme of the book is the challenges associated with establishing global, multi-stakeholder governance structures based on bottom-up, consensus-seeking decisional procedures, without direct foundation in a treaty framework. The book's basic argument is that the success of the Internet is largely due to its development within open and democratic cultures, and that Internet governance structures ought accordingly to continue to cultivate such cultures.
Keywords: Internet, communication protocols, domain names, network design, decisional procedures, governance, multi-stakeholder Table of Contents
Introduction
1.
Building cyberspace: a brief history of Internet
2.
Models of Internet governance
3.
Governors of Internet
4.
Development of core Internet standards: the work of IETF and W3C
5.
The naming game: governance of the Domain Name System
6.
Internet governance goes global
Bibliography
Index
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