How prepared are countries for digital trade? And what can they do to enhance their policies?
The event presents a new global database produced by a consortium of researchers from the European University Institute, Bocconi University, Hertie School, the European Centre for International Political Economy and LSE, which benchmarks the readiness of some one hundred countries around the world for digital trade.
Speakers
Sabina Ciofu is the Associate Director at techUK, running the International Policy and Trade Programme. She leads techUK’s work on international trade policy, with a focus on digital trade chapters in FTAs, as well as broader engagement with the G7, G20, WTO and OECD.
Martina Ferracane is a Research Fellow at the European University Institute. She was awarded a Ph.D. on the topic of cross-border data flows at Hamburg University, where she also received a Postdoc scholarship to investigate the topic of creative pedagogy in the digital era.
Graham Floater is the Director for trade policy at the Department for International Trade. He is also the chair of the G7 Digital Trade Group, Chief Negotiator for UK-Switzerland, and Chief Negotiator for the Singapore Digital Economy Agreement.
Sam Lowe is a Partner at Flint Global speacilising in trade policy with a particular focus on regulatory barriers to trade, customs, trade in services and Brexit. He is also a senior research fellow at The Policy Institute, Kings College London and a co-founder of the UK Trade Forum.
Robert Basedow is an Assistant Professor for International Political Economy at the European Institute. His research focuses on international trade and investment policy, international dispute settlement mechanisms and regulatory cooperation.
More about this event
The LSE European Institute is a centre for research and graduate teaching on the processes of integration and fragmentation within Europe.
The Digital Trade Integration (DTI) is part of the EUI Global Governance Programme. The project aims to increase transparency on digital trade restrictions by constructing a dataset of digital trade restrictions and an index on digital trade integration, to be released in the coming months. The methodology is based on international best practices on how to regulate digital trade and leverages the cross-disciplinary exchange between the CIVICA partners.
The DTI project is one of the winning projects selected under the first call for CIVICA Research’s collaborative research projects. CIVICA Research brings together researchers from eight leading European universities in the social sciences to contribute knowledge and solutions to the world’s most pressing challenges. The project aims to strengthen the research & innovation pillar of the European University alliance CIVICA. CIVICA Research is co-funded by the EU’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.