This article investigates what risks to the public interest may arise in Internet policy development facilitated by Canada’s communications regulator, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC). It finds that different risks exist in four distinct phases of CRTC policy formation. Although these threats are wide-ranging, they often relate to the strategic behaviors of well-resourced groups that advocate for policy positions that are adjacent or contrary to the public interest, a regulatory process in some ways unsuited for robust civil society participation, and the resource constraints of public interest groups that regularly participate in this process.
CITATION STYLE
Wilkinson, S. (2020). FOUR PHASES OF INTERNET POLICY DEVELOPMENT Risks to the Public Interest. Journal of Information Policy, 10(1), 184–209. https://doi.org/10.5325/JINFOPOLI.10.1.0184
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