The Centre for European Perspective is launching a new four-day European Digital Diplomacy Exchange workshop that will convene officials from 16 different countries to determine how public sector adoption of emerging digital technologies can center citizens in democratic processes that bolster social productivity and resilience. Our training, “Centering Citizens in a Secure Digital Society,” will bring together mid- and high-level government communications officials, private technology sector representatives, security experts, media figures, and academic thought leaders from across Europe and the United States to discuss and determine how governments can best empower their citizens with the critical political, social, and cultural information necessary to protect national information sovereignty and counter foreign propaganda – all of which is critical to promoting the information economies necessary to ensure citizens have a productive role in shaping their nation’s future.

Participants will engage in a number of lectures, structured discussions, and hand-on activities that bridge the theory and practice of critical strategic communications capacities necessary to ensure that governments are fulfilling their role as strong stewards and facilitators of public information and public discourse.

By convening practitioners from across sectors and across national borders, EDDE continues to bolster a vital platform for cooperation and collaboration that is integral to ensuring that governments, industry, media, and academia are collectively engaged in addressing challenges in the information space that continue to pose a threat to national sovereignty, national security, and national social resilience. EDDE’s approach ensures that all citizens’, and all nations’, interests are protected. It ensures we build a future when each nation can thrive individually and in partnership. 

 The Centre for European Perspective is overseeing and implementing the European Digital Diplomacy Exchange project. Activities are supported and funded by the U.S. Department of State and the Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs, in the scope of the Development Cooperation and Aid program.