![]() We read digital policy in broad terms to encompass the entire range of policy concerns-from infrastructure planning to competition law, data protection, digital literacy, etc. ![]() In February 2020, the European Commission published ‘A European Strategy for Data’ (referred to in this article as ‘EU data strategy’) as part of a wider drive concerning digital transformation and policy. This vision builds upon the Commission’s digital strategy as published in February 2020. Here the Commission sets the course towards a digitally empowered Europe by 2030. In March 2021, the European Commission announced Europe’s Digital Decade. The article is divided into three parts: an executive findings and recommendations section (where our main findings are articled) Themes and Key Takeaways (where we thematically flesh out the document) and, EU Data Strategy document summary (where we provide an overview summary the document itself). As such, this article is to be read as a thematic analysis rather than a close reading of the EC’s publication. Within this context, in this article, we use the EC publication as a point of departure to explore themes central to national and international digital transformation and policy writ large. In this article, we analyse the publication as it touches on broader themes ranging from digital literacy, to cloud infrastructure and artificial intelligence. Access on: –2024/europe-fit-digital-age/european-data-strategy_en (2020)) as part of a wider drive concerning digital transformation and policy. In February 2020, the European Commission published ‘A European Strategy for Data’ (European data strategy: Making the EU a role model for a society empowered by data. ![]() ![]() In March 2021, the European Commission announced Europe's Digital Decade (Europe’s Digital Decade: Commission sets the course towards a digitally empowered Europe by 2030.
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