The protection and promotion of cultural diversity in a digital networked environment: Mapping possible advances towards coherence mira burri-nenova, christoph beat graber and thomas steiner * key messages r Neither the WTO nor UNESCO currently offers appropriate solutions to the trade and culture predicament that would allow for efficient protection and promotion of cultural diversity. r The trade and culture discourse is over-politicised and owing to the related path dependencies, a number of feasible solutions presently appear blocked. r The digital networked environment has profoundly changed the ways cultural content is created, distributed, accessed and consumed, and may thus offer good reasons to reassess and readjust the present models of governance. r Access to information appears to be the most appropriate focus of the discussions with a view to protecting and promoting cultural diversity in the new digital media setting, both in local and global contexts. r This new focal point also demands broadening and interconnecting the policy discussions, which should go beyond the narrow scope of audiovisual media services, but cautiously take account of the developments at the network and applications levels, as well as in other domains, most notably protection of intellectual property rights.