A welcome addition to Palgrave's Global Media Policy and Business
series, Internet Governance and the Global South documents the role of
the global south in Internet policymaking and challenges the
globalization theories that declared the death of the state in global
decision-making. Abu Bhuiyan argues that the global Internet politics is
primarily a conflict between the states - the United States of America
and the states of the global south - because the former controls
Internet policymaking. The states of the global south have been both
oppositional and acquiescing to the sponsored policies of the United
States on Internet issues such as digital divide, multilingualism,
intellectual property rights and cyber security. They do not oppose the
neoliberal underpinnings of the policies promoted by the United States,
but ask for an international framework to govern the Internet so that
they can work as equal partners in setting norms for the global
Internet.