What does the notion of “sovereignty” mean when referring to the digital?

This article analyzes how the notion of “sovereignty” has been and is still mobilized in the realm of the digital. This notion is increasingly used to describe various forms of independence, control, and autonomy over digital infrastructures, technologies, and data. Our analysis originates from our previous and current research with activist “tech collectives” where we observed a use of the notion to emphasize alternative technological practices in a way that significantly differs from a governmental policy perspective. In this article, we review several publications in order to show the difference, if not diverging ways in which the notion is being conceptualized, in particular by different groups. We show that while the notion is generally used to assert some form of collective control on digital content and/or infrastructures, the precise interpretations, subjects, meanings, and definitions of sovereignty can significantly differ.

[1]  Timothy Wu CYBERSPACE SOVEREIGNTY ?-- THE INTERNET AND THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM , 2003 .

[2]  J. Barlow A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace , 2021, Commonplace.

[3]  K. Krippendorff Major Metaphors of Communication and Some Constructivist Reflections on Their Use , 1993 .

[4]  Milton Mueller Will the Internet Fragment?: Sovereignty, Globalization and Cyberspace , 2017 .

[5]  Serge Proulx Interroger la métaphore d'une société de l'information : horizon et limites d'une utopie , 2007 .

[6]  julian gill-peterson Sexting girls: technological sovereignty and the digital , 2015 .

[7]  Akim D. Reinhardt Red skin, white masks: Rejecting the colonial politics of recognition , 2016 .

[8]  S. Budnitsky,et al.  Branding Internet sovereignty: Digital media and the Chinese–Russian cyberalliance , 2018 .

[9]  Benjamin H. Bratton,et al.  The Stack: On Software and Sovereignty , 2016 .

[10]  Tahu Kukutai,et al.  Indigenous Data Sovereignty: Toward an agenda , 2016 .

[11]  S. Globerman Canadian Science Policy and Technological Sovereignty , 1978 .

[12]  T. Kukutai,et al.  Pathways to First Nations’ data and information sovereignty , 2016 .

[13]  Benjamin Peters,et al.  Digital Keywords: A Vocabulary of Information Society and Culture , 2016 .

[14]  P. Bellanger De la souveraineté numérique , 2012 .

[15]  Martin C. Libicki,et al.  Getting to Yes with China in Cyberspace , 2016 .

[16]  R. Gonzales Dark matters: on the surveillance of blackness , 2016 .

[17]  Isabel Skierka,et al.  Technological sovereignty: Missing the point? , 2015, 2015 7th International Conference on Cyber Conflict: Architectures in Cyberspace.

[18]  Frederick Turner,et al.  From Counterculture to Cyberculture: Stewart Brand, the Whole Earth Network, and the Rise of Digital Utopianism , 2006 .

[19]  Kelsey Sherrod Michael,et al.  A prehistory of the cloud , 2017, New Media Soc..

[20]  Andrew Clement,et al.  Internet Surveillance and Boomerang Routing: A Call for Canadian Network Sovereignty , 2013 .

[21]  M. Walter Data politics and Indigenous representation in Australian statistics , 2016 .

[22]  Michelle Murphy,et al.  Seizing the Means of Reproduction: Entanglements of Feminism, Health, and Technoscience , 2012 .

[23]  Alex Wilson Our Coming In Stories: Cree Identity, Body Sovereignty and Gender Self- Determination , 2015 .

[24]  W. Werner,et al.  The Endurance of Sovereignty , 2001 .

[25]  Natalia Calderón Beltrán Technological Sovereignty: What Chances for Alternative Practices to Emerge in Daily IT Use? , 2016 .

[26]  Y. Nugraha,et al.  Towards data sovereignty in cyberspace , 2015, 2015 3rd International Conference on Information and Communication Technology (ICoICT).

[27]  Paul B. Grant TECHNOLOGICAL SOVEREIGNTY: FORGOTTEN FACTOR IN THE ‘HI-TECH’ RAZZAMATAZZ , 1983 .

[28]  A. Appadurai Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy , 1990 .

[29]  G. King,et al.  Can Media and Technology Help Make “Another World Possible”? Reflections from the Media@McGill Research Delegation to the 2015 World Social Forum in Tunisia , 2016 .

[30]  Derek Hrynyshyn,et al.  The real cyber war: The political economy of internet freedom , 2016, New Media Soc..