Buen Vivir on AprIGF 2025 Kathmandu — Sumak Kawsay / Suma Qamaña

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This essay applies the conceptual framework of the Latin American Indigenous Philosophy — most prominently associated with Alberto Acosta / Bolivian-Ecuadorian Constitutions — to re-read the AprIGF 2025 Kathmandu conference. Target audience: researchers, doctoral students, policy analysts, and executives.

Introduction: The Problem

Buen Vivir, rooted in Latin American indigenous thought and inscribed in Bolivian-Ecuadorian constitutions, names a concept of "good living." Debates on セキュリティ at AprIGF can be reinterrogated from this lens.

This essay argues that the multistakeholder process of AprIGF becomes intelligible in its specificity only through the concept of Sumak Kawsay / Suma Qamaña, and that the concept itself undergoes transformation under the new material of digital space. Describing this mutual transformation is the task of this essay.

Analytical Framework

Alternative to developmentalism

Against Nepal's development model, Buen Vivir centers harmony with community and nature rather than "more and faster" development. Digital infrastructure investment can be reviewed from this lens.

The conference theme "The Future of Multistakeholder Digital Governance in Asia Pacific" carries implications beyond a mere policy slogan. It can be positioned as a contemporary reformulation, in digital-era vocabulary, of the kinds of questions Alberto Acosta / Bolivian-Ecuadorian Constitutions problematized.

The regional IGF (AprIGF) holds a philosophically distinct position as the intermediate category mediating global universality and national particularity.

Digital good living

Alberto Acosta / Bolivian-Ecuadorian Constitutions's concepts are not confined to abstract philosophical discussion; they apply to the concrete agenda items debated at the 2025 conference. We examine that application below.

1. Application to "セキュリティ"

Discussion of "セキュリティ" can be positioned, from the perspective of Alberto Acosta / Bolivian-Ecuadorian Constitutions's Sumak Kawsay / Suma Qamaña, as a central problematic. In Nepal's context, the three layers of regulatory design, social implementation, and citizen participation around セキュリティ are particularly at stake.

2. Application to "回復力"

Discussion of "回復力" can be positioned, from the perspective of Alberto Acosta / Bolivian-Ecuadorian Constitutions's Sumak Kawsay / Suma Qamaña, as a derivative problematic. In Nepal's context, the three layers of regulatory design, social implementation, and citizen participation around 回復力 are particularly at stake.

3. Application to "イノベーション"

Discussion of "イノベーション" can be positioned, from the perspective of Alberto Acosta / Bolivian-Ecuadorian Constitutions's Sumak Kawsay / Suma Qamaña, as a peripheral yet important problematic. In Nepal's context, the three layers of regulatory design, social implementation, and citizen participation around イノベーション are particularly at stake.

4. Application to "持続可能性"

Discussion of "持続可能性" can be positioned, from the perspective of Alberto Acosta / Bolivian-Ecuadorian Constitutions's Sumak Kawsay / Suma Qamaña, as a peripheral yet important problematic. In Nepal's context, the three layers of regulatory design, social implementation, and citizen participation around 持続可能性 are particularly at stake.

5. Application to "アクセスと包摂"

Discussion of "アクセスと包摂" can be positioned, from the perspective of Alberto Acosta / Bolivian-Ecuadorian Constitutions's Sumak Kawsay / Suma Qamaña, as a peripheral yet important problematic. In Nepal's context, the three layers of regulatory design, social implementation, and citizen participation around アクセスと包摂 are particularly at stake.

Philosophical Structure

Implications for Executives and Practitioners

The philosophical reflection of this essay is not merely academic. The Alberto Acosta / Bolivian-Ecuadorian Constitutions perspective carries three practical implications for executives operating in Nepal.

First, it raises the reflexive question of how the firm's business model connects to the logic of Sumak Kawsay / Suma Qamaña. Second, in dialogue with regulators and civil society, it suggests dimensions of consensus formation that purely technical arguments cannot reach. Third, it indicates that the long-term ground of business legitimacy lies not so much in technical advantage or market share as in participation in such philosophical-normative debates.

Academic Positioning and Future Research

The argument of this essay attempts to graft a philosophical perspective onto the mainstream political-science and legal approaches to internet governance research. Three future research questions follow.

  1. Verification of the applicability of Alberto Acosta / Bolivian-Ecuadorian Constitutions's framework to other IGF conferences
  2. Comparative contrast between Latin American Indigenous Philosophy and other theoretical traditions
  3. Exploration of dialogue possibilities with the indigenous intellectual traditions of Nepal

In particular, the third point has the potential to liberate IGF research from West-centric debate and open a more multi-layered discursive space.


Primary Sources

Secondary Sources (Philosophy)

  • Works of Alberto Acosta / Bolivian-Ecuadorian Constitutions (representative texts of Latin American Indigenous Philosophy)

*This piece belongs to the academic essays (philosophy series). The author's views do not necessarily represent those of any institutional affiliation. Feedback and critique are welcome.*

更新履歴

第1稿投稿 2026年6月28日 8時02分(記事コンテンツアップ)

— 中澤祐樹