Gabriel Accascina is a former Director of the Knowledge Management Group at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and a former Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School Center for International Development. His engagement with internet governance and DNS policy reaches back to the founding period of the modern internet’s institutional architecture. He contributed to the original ICANN green paper in 1998, the US Department of Commerce consultation that laid the groundwork for ICANN’s creation.
His career in UN deployment and digital infrastructure has included service as UNDP APDIP Regional Coordinator based in Kuala Lumpur and pioneering internet connectivity work in Bhutan, East Timor, and Fiji. In Bhutan, he created DrukNet, the country’s first internet service provider, which brought the Kingdom online on terms consistent with its own development priorities. He was involved in the recovery of several country-code top-level domains including .tv for Tuvalu and spearheaded the UNDP/CISCO partnership to launch Network Academies in nine countries, for which he and his team won the Stockholm Challenge Award. He has worked closely with multiple UN agencies and IFIs on knowledge management, digital governance, and ICT for development projects over more than three decades in over 80 countries. Italian-American by background and currently based in rural Maremma, Tuscany, he writes regularly on international policy and digital sovereignty for Italian and English-language publications, consults selectively on internet governance and digital infrastructure questions, and contributes to digital communication and alternative energy sustainability research.
A Wikipedia entry at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel_Accascina provides additional biographical context.
As AI systems increasingly mediate trust online, the United Nations faces a closing opportunity to secure a sovereign .un domain, creating a machine-readable digital identity that strengthens authenticity, preserves institutional knowledge, and counters impersonation. more