Bill Graham: Difference between revisions
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==Past Work== | ==Past Work== | ||
Bill joined the Canadian government in 1988, and held management positions in program evaluation, strategic planning, promotion of community networking and Internet use and adoption in Canada, as well as international business development | Bill joined the Canadian government in 1988, and held management positions in program evaluation, strategic planning, promotion of community networking and Internet use and adoption in Canada, as well as international business development, information and communications technology sector. | ||
Before joining [[ISOC]] he had worked as the Director of International Telecommunications Policy at [[Industry Canada]], Senior Advisor of International Telecommunications Policy at Industry Canada, Associate Director of Government Relations at [[Teleglobe Canada]], Trade Strategy and Market Access manager at Industry Canada and Coordinator of Community networking at Industry Canada. | Before joining [[ISOC]] he had worked as the Director of International Telecommunications Policy at [[Industry Canada]], Senior Advisor of International Telecommunications Policy at Industry Canada, Associate Director of Government Relations at [[Teleglobe Canada]], Trade Strategy and Market Access manager at Industry Canada and Coordinator of Community networking at Industry Canada. |
Revision as of 05:45, 21 February 2011
Country: | Canada |
LinkedIn: | [Bill Graham Bill Graham] |
Twitter: | @ISOCBill |
Bill Graham joined the Internet Society in December of 2007 to lead ISOC's strategic global engagement activities. He is responsible for the Internet Society's efforts to develop strategic positions on key Internet issues and to engage the highest level of global policy makers on emerging issues.[1]
Past Work[edit | edit source]
Bill joined the Canadian government in 1988, and held management positions in program evaluation, strategic planning, promotion of community networking and Internet use and adoption in Canada, as well as international business development, information and communications technology sector.
Before joining ISOC he had worked as the Director of International Telecommunications Policy at Industry Canada, Senior Advisor of International Telecommunications Policy at Industry Canada, Associate Director of Government Relations at Teleglobe Canada, Trade Strategy and Market Access manager at Industry Canada and Coordinator of Community networking at Industry Canada.
As the Director of International Telecommunications Policy, he was responsible for coordinating Canadian participation in multilateral organizations, including the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), APEC Telecommunications and Information Working Group, the Inter-American Telecommunications Commission (CITEL), ICANN Governmental Advisory Council, and for bilateral relations on telecommunications policy issues for Canada.
Education[edit | edit source]
He received his education from University of Victoria.[2]