Building Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) for Scalable and Inclusive Digital Service Delivery
The digital transformation of governance relies on well-designed Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), which serves as the backbone for scalable, inclusive and efficient public services. The development of interoperable digital ID systems, secure payment platforms, and data exchange mechanisms enables governments to enhance service delivery, promote economic participation, and strengthen digital trust. Ensuring resilient and universally accessible DPI is essential for fostering digital inclusion and supporting future-ready societies.
This Track invites discussions on DPI as a fundamental enabler of digital governance, exploring policy frameworks, regulatory models, and implementation strategies that ensure secure, adaptable, and interoperable infrastructure.
Accepted Papers:
- The case of India's transformation from being mostly cash dependent for daily payment transactions to taking the global lead in real-time payment systems | Sushil Prakash
- Digital identification as a trust constraint to inclusive digital financial services (DFS): A comparative case study of the Nigerian ecosystem to the German model | Raymond Onuoha
- Assessing DigiLocker as a Data Exchange Digital Public Infrastructure: A Framework-Based Analysis | Shahrish Khan, Gayatri Doctor, Mathews Joseph, Ameya Naik
- Technical Interoperability of Open Data: Analysis, Barriers, and Opportunities for the Open Data Ecosystem | Mohsan Ali, Yannis Charalabidis, Charalampos Alexopoulos