- ICANN’s support for Smart Africa’s CAIGA framework may shift decision-making from community-led processes to politically influenced oversight.
- The partnership highlights concerns over African institutions being held to different standards than other regional internet registries.
A controversial collaboration
ICANN, the global body responsible for coordinating internet identifiers, has partnered with Smart Africa, an intergovernmental organisation of 40 African states, in developing the Continental Africa Internet Governance Architecture (CAIGA). This framework, presented at ICANN84 in Dublin, has been described as two years of joint work between the organisations. While ICANN frames its involvement as advisory, the partnership includes financial support and active participation in the development of the CAIGA framework, raising concerns about neutrality. Critics argue that such engagement risks transferring credibility to a top-down political model, where decisions may bypass AFRINIC’s traditional community-led governance.
Also Read: AFRINIC vs. CAIGA: Competing visions for Africa’s internet future
Emerging power dynamics
Under the CAIGA framework, Smart Africa would be able to politically endorse AFRINIC governance reforms if the membership does not adopt them. Paid participation structures, dual reporting lines, and governmental recommendations directly to the AFRINIC board could effectively allow political influence to override established multistakeholder processes. This has triggered debate about whether African institutions are being held to different standards than other regional internet registries, such as RIPE NCC in Europe or APNIC in Asia-Pacific, which remain largely insulated from political interference.
Also Read: Smart Africa’s CAIGA: Collaboration or centralisation of power?
Implications for global governance
The ICANN–Smart Africa partnership illustrates the tension between digital sovereignty and community-driven governance. While African governments have legitimate interests in infrastructure, critics warn that political endorsement mechanisms presented as “multistakeholder” risk setting a precedent that could reshape global internet governance. Experts emphasise that maintaining bottom-up processes is essential for trust, stability, and the technical integrity of the internet across all regions.
As ICANN continues to participate in CAIGA’s development, the global community is watching closely. The partnership underscores the delicate balance between regional influence, multistakeholder ideals, and the overarching need for consistent governance standards worldwide.
