In the final episode of season one of Internet Changemakers, hosts Claire van Zwieten and Yug Desai and guests discuss the future of internet governance and digital inclusion. Joined by Amged Shwehdy, a digital transformation specialist and researcher at the UN Economic Commission for Africa, and Saba Tiku Beyene, youth advocate and AI policy researcher with roles at ICANN, the Internet Society, and the UN Internet Governance Forum (IGF). The conversation centers on the outcomes of the WSIS+20 Review and what comes next in the global effort to keep the internet open, secure, and equitable. Amged is an alumnus of the ISOC Early Career Fellowship. Saba is an alumna of the Youth Ambassador Program and the Community Fellowship.
Both guests stress that meaningful youth participation must go beyond tokenism. Amged called for structured pathways that move youth from panels and workshops into decision-making bodies, celebrating programs like the Internet Society's Youth Ambassadors and ICANN NextGen for equipping young participants with tools to intervene—not just observe—at global meetings. Saba adds that sustainable youth engagement requires institutional support, paid opportunities, long-term programs, mentorship, and shared leadership so that passion and volunteerism are matched with real opportunities for growth and influence.
Looking ahead, both guests remain optimistic. Amged points to the evolution of Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) and AI capacity-building as transformative opportunities for development. Saba emphasizes the power of open-source AI to democratize innovation and ensure that technology serves local communities rather than being imposed from outside. Despite the risks—fragmentation, erosion of openness, symbolic participation—they both believe that the multi-stakeholder model, though imperfect, remains the most sustainable and effective way forward.