Cortesi, Sandra Hasse, Alexa Gasser, Urs (Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, ) This spotlight seeks to share Youth and Media’s initial insights around ways different stakeholders such as international. She is responsible for coordinating the Youth and Media’s policy, research, and educational initiatives, and is leading the collaboration between the Berkman Klein Center and UNICEF. So you’re interested in the Berkman Klein Center’s. Sandra Cortesi is a Fellow at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University and the Director of Youth and Media. dominance through legal rules), and the ways in which this manifests itself in developing countries in Africa. Youth Participation in a Digital World: Designing and Implementing Spaces, Programs, and Methodologies. ICYMI: a must-read collection of resources for transitioning to online teaching from BKC co-director. This panel examines questions of unequal power in the global digital economy (through U.S corporations, China, and Brussels (i.e. The fellowship is a collaboration between the Nieman Foundation for Journalism and the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard. For so-called “periphery” countries such as those in sub-Saharan Africa, the information economy represents an opportunity to chase the long-elusive quest for industrialization, now dubbed “digital industrialization”, “digital development” or “data for development.” Despite the optimism represented in the digital development policy discourse, the limits and potentials of any kind of development are heavily constrained by background conditions rooted in past global power imbalances and a colonial legacy of non-contextual laws and institutions. The Nieman-Berkman Klein Fellowship in Journalism Innovation brings individuals to Harvard University to work on a specific course of research or a specific project relating to journalism innovation. The global information economy has provided freedom-enhancing affordances for previously marginalized groups, but has also enabled extractive practices in the form of digital imperialism, or as others term it, data colonialism.