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His job responsibilty at [[IGP]] includes following and analyzing the work occurring in global forums such as [[ICANN]], Regional Internet Registries, [[IETF]], [[ITU-T]], the [[IGF]], as well as domestic venues like NTIA and the U.S. Congress. He also actively participates in the Noncommercial Users Constituency within [[ICANN]]'s policy making body the [[GNSO]], serves as [[IGP]]'s liaison to the OECD's Civil Society Information Society Advisory Council, and have organized several workshops for the [[IGF]] and other venues.<ref>[http://www.diplointernetgovernance.org/profile/BrendenKuerbis Diplo Internet Governance Community]</ref>
 
His job responsibilty at [[IGP]] includes following and analyzing the work occurring in global forums such as [[ICANN]], Regional Internet Registries, [[IETF]], [[ITU-T]], the [[IGF]], as well as domestic venues like NTIA and the U.S. Congress. He also actively participates in the Noncommercial Users Constituency within [[ICANN]]'s policy making body the [[GNSO]], serves as [[IGP]]'s liaison to the OECD's Civil Society Information Society Advisory Council, and have organized several workshops for the [[IGF]] and other venues.<ref>[http://www.diplointernetgovernance.org/profile/BrendenKuerbis Diplo Internet Governance Community]</ref>
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Brenden Kuerbis is a regular contributor to and co-editor of [[IGP]] Blog, does research on the political economy of global Internet policy, particularly with regard to Internet infrastructure security and its governance. He is currently analyzing the development and deployment of DNS and routing technical standards pertaining to securing critical Internet resources (e.g., DNSSEC, RPKI) using principal-agent delegation and standardization theory, and both historical and social network analysis methods. Some of his other projects are the governance of global identity systems (e.g., service provider identity ([[SPID]])), and social network analysis of transnational policy advocates related to the area of Internet governance.<ref>[http://ischool.syr.edu/facstaff/member.aspx?id=414 Syracuse University]</ref>
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Brenden Kuerbis is a regular contributor to and co-editor of the [[IGP]] blog, does research on the political economy of global Internet policy, particularly with regard to Internet infrastructure security and its governance. He is currently analyzing the development and deployment of DNS and routing technical standards pertaining to securing critical Internet resources (e.g., DNSSEC, RPKI) using principal-agent delegation and standardization theory, and both historical and social network analysis methods. Some of his other projects are the governance of global identity systems (e.g., service provider identity ([[SPID]])), and social network analysis of transnational policy advocates related to the area of Internet governance.<ref>[http://ischool.syr.edu/facstaff/member.aspx?id=414 Syracuse University]</ref>
    
Several of his works has been presented at [[TPRC]], International Communications Association, International Telecommunications Society, the International Studies Association and appeared in Telecommunications Policy, The Information Society([[ISOC]]), the International Journal of Communication, [[CircleID]], and info: The journal of policy, regulation and strategy for telecommunications, information and media.<ref>[http://internetgovernance.org/people-kuerbis.html Internet Governance.com]</ref>
 
Several of his works has been presented at [[TPRC]], International Communications Association, International Telecommunications Society, the International Studies Association and appeared in Telecommunications Policy, The Information Society([[ISOC]]), the International Journal of Communication, [[CircleID]], and info: The journal of policy, regulation and strategy for telecommunications, information and media.<ref>[http://internetgovernance.org/people-kuerbis.html Internet Governance.com]</ref>