8,086 research outputs found
The Internet post-Dubai
Jonathan Liebenau participated at a high-level workshop in Rome on 8 March hosted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Alleanza per Internet. Read Jonathan Liebenau‘s reflections on the workshop and his own contributions to the debate
Ten years of US e-government: retrospect and prospect
Jonathan Liebenau, head of LSE Tech, reflects on an event organized by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF) held at the U.S. Capital Building as part of a series on e-government
Europe’s Internet from a post-Dubai perspective
We have recently published a commentary from Jonathan Liebenau after his participation at “Beyond Dubai: a new global agenda for the Internet”, held on March 8th, 2013, at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Rome. Read here his keynote speech
What can governments do to speed up the development of new vaccines?
COVID-19 vaccines have been approved in record time. Which incentives enabled that to happen? Jonathan Liebenau (LSE) summarises a new paper that looks at which combination of tax incentives, subsidies and speeded-up regulatory approvals are most effective in developing new drugs and vaccines. The fact that COVID-19 vaccines have been developed and distributed in less ... Continue
Just Released: DCMS’ UK Broadband Impact Study
The DCMS just released a study on the benefits of superfast broadband in the UK looking at the impact of public interventions. Jonathan Liebenau of the LSE Network Economy Forum offers initial thoughts on the report’s usefulness and limitations, promising more analysis to come and raises questions to guide further analysis
What are the dimensions of the internet?
On Monday 10 February, Jonathan Liebenau presented a synopsis of one of the research themes of our team during the February’s London Enterprise Technology MeetUp held monthly at the LSE. Read here Jonathan’s remarks, key questions and possible ways forward of a core theme of our research: understanding the dimensions of the internet and their implications for business, regulation and the digital economy more broadly
Convergence of computing science, networks and the law: reflections from the workshop at UPenn Law
Silvia Elaluf-Calderwood and Jonathan Liebenau from the LSE Tech attended an invitation-only Roundtable on Computer Science and the Law and the University of Pennsylvania Law School, on the 24-25th of June. In tihs post, Silvia and Jonathan present the highligts of the workshop – the first of its kind – aiming at building bridges among scientists, engineers and law professionals interested in convergence, regulation and economics of the internet
A commentary on the European commission’s “digital ‘to-do’ list: new digital priorities for 2013-2014”
The European Commission has released a new priority list of digital agenda actions, one in a series of a periodic “stock-taking” exercises. In this post, Jonathan Liebenau and Silvia Elaluf-Calderwood review the main points and offer some critical comments on the future of digital Europe
Internet metrics, telecom and internet policy: highlights from the TPRC 2013
The TPRC is the oldest and most influential continuous meeting on telecoms policy, always held in Washington, D.C. and nowadays subtitled the “Conference on Communication, Information and Internet Policy”. Silvia Elaluf-Calderwood and Jonathan Liebenau of the LSE Tech team presented papers and reported on the conference on our twitter account. In this post, they summarise the main debate
Spectrum allocation for emergency services in the UK and Europe: An open set of questions to be researched
In light of the upcoming changes that we may foresee in spectrum allocation, Silvia Elaluf-Calderwood, Jonathan Liebenau and Patrik Karrberg outline key questions on spectrum allocation for emergency services in the UK and Europe
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