Regulatory Imperatives for the Future of SADC’s “Digital Complexity Ecosystem”
This article uses a “digital complexity ecosystem” framing to delineate the challenges facing regulation of the digital economy in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region. The digital complexity ecosystem approach, grounded in the field of complexity science – and in particula...
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doaj-0ede99a1038c47089b728c42cc2e77df2020-11-25T03:47:04ZengLINK Centre, School of Literature Language and Media (SLLM)The African Journal of Information and Communication2077-72052077-72132017-12-0120129https://doi.org/10.23962/10539/23578Regulatory Imperatives for the Future of SADC’s “Digital Complexity Ecosystem”Lucienne Abrahamshttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-5219-8448This article uses a “digital complexity ecosystem” framing to delineate the challenges facing regulation of the digital economy in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region. The digital complexity ecosystem approach, grounded in the field of complexity science – and in particular the study of complex adaptive systems (CASs) – is used to illuminate the sources of uncertainty, unpredictability and discontinuity currently present in the SADC digital sphere. Drawing on examples from three regulatory areas, namely mobile financial services, Internet of Things (IoT) network and services markets, and e-health services, the article argues that SADC regulatory bodies will themselves need to adopt highly adaptive, nonlinear approaches if they are to successfully regulate activities in the digital ecosystem moving forward. Based on the findings, recommendations are made on SADC regional regulatory agendas and, at national levels, matters of concurrent jurisdiction.http://hdl.handle.net/10539/23578complexity sciencecomplex adaptive systems (cas)digital economydigital complexity ecosystemsouthern african development community (sadc)electronic communications regulationeconomic regulationsocial regulationconcurrent regulatory jurisdictionmobile financial servicesinternet of things (iot)e-health |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Lucienne Abrahams |
spellingShingle |
Lucienne Abrahams Regulatory Imperatives for the Future of SADC’s “Digital Complexity Ecosystem” The African Journal of Information and Communication complexity science complex adaptive systems (cas) digital economy digital complexity ecosystem southern african development community (sadc) electronic communications regulation economic regulation social regulation concurrent regulatory jurisdiction mobile financial services internet of things (iot) e-health |
author_facet |
Lucienne Abrahams |
author_sort |
Lucienne Abrahams |
title |
Regulatory Imperatives for the Future of SADC’s “Digital Complexity Ecosystem” |
title_short |
Regulatory Imperatives for the Future of SADC’s “Digital Complexity Ecosystem” |
title_full |
Regulatory Imperatives for the Future of SADC’s “Digital Complexity Ecosystem” |
title_fullStr |
Regulatory Imperatives for the Future of SADC’s “Digital Complexity Ecosystem” |
title_full_unstemmed |
Regulatory Imperatives for the Future of SADC’s “Digital Complexity Ecosystem” |
title_sort |
regulatory imperatives for the future of sadc’s “digital complexity ecosystem” |
publisher |
LINK Centre, School of Literature Language and Media (SLLM) |
series |
The African Journal of Information and Communication |
issn |
2077-7205 2077-7213 |
publishDate |
2017-12-01 |
description |
This article uses a “digital complexity ecosystem” framing to delineate the challenges
facing regulation of the digital economy in the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) region. The digital complexity ecosystem approach, grounded
in the field of complexity science – and in particular the study of complex adaptive
systems (CASs) – is used to illuminate the sources of uncertainty, unpredictability
and discontinuity currently present in the SADC digital sphere. Drawing on
examples from three regulatory areas, namely mobile financial services, Internet of
Things (IoT) network and services markets, and e-health services, the article argues
that SADC regulatory bodies will themselves need to adopt highly adaptive, nonlinear
approaches if they are to successfully regulate activities in the digital ecosystem
moving forward. Based on the findings, recommendations are made on SADC
regional regulatory agendas and, at national levels, matters of concurrent jurisdiction. |
topic |
complexity science complex adaptive systems (cas) digital economy digital complexity ecosystem southern african development community (sadc) electronic communications regulation economic regulation social regulation concurrent regulatory jurisdiction mobile financial services internet of things (iot) e-health |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10539/23578 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT lucienneabrahams regulatoryimperativesforthefutureofsadcsdigitalcomplexityecosystem |
_version_ |
1724503666819334144 |