The TTMAG helps develop policies for the .tt ccTLD
The TTMAG helps develop policies for the .tt ccTLD
The TTMAG has organisations which are in one of the following TTMAG Stakeholder Groups:
Each TTMAG Stakeholder Group selects 2 members to serve on the TTMAG Board, following a nomination and selection procedure.
The TTMAG has organisations which are in one of the following TTMAG Stakeholder Groups:
Each TTMAG Stakeholder Group selects 2 members to serve on the TTMAG Board, following a nomination and selection procedure.
The TTMAG has organisations which are in one of the following TTMAG Stakeholder Groups:
Each TTMAG Stakeholder Group selects 2 members to serve on the TTMAG Board, following a nomination and selection procedure.
The TTMAG has organisations which are in one of the following TTMAG Stakeholder Groups:
Each TTMAG Stakeholder Group selects 2 members to serve on the TTMAG Board, following a nomination and selection procedure.

The TTMAG has member organisations which are in one of the following TTMAG Stakeholder Groups:
Each Member Organisation in the TTMAG must have a primary representative and can have a secondary representative.
Representatives of Foreign Based Organisations are not eligible to serve on the TTMAG Board, as Board membership is reserved for entities based in Trinidad and Tobago.
Each TTMAG Stakeholder Group (with the exception of Foreign Based Organisations) must select 2 members to serve on the TTMAG Board, following a nomination and selection procedure.
These Board members from each stakeholder group are designated “A” and “B”.
The “A” Board Member from a stakeholder group is elected in an odd-numbered year and the “B” Board Member from the same stakeholder group is elected in an even-numbered year.


The TTMAG has member organisations which are in one of the following TTMAG Stakeholder Groups:
Each Member Organisation in the TTMAG must have a primary representative and can have a secondary representative.
Representatives of Foreign Based Organisations are not eligible to serve on the TTMAG Board, as Board membership is reserved for entities based in Trinidad and Tobago.
Each TTMAG Stakeholder Group (with the exception of Foreign Based Organisations) must select 2 members to serve on the TTMAG Board, following a nomination and selection procedure.
These Board members from each stakeholder group are designated “A” and “B”.
The “A” Board Member from a stakeholder group is elected in an odd-numbered year and the “B” Board Member from the same stakeholder group is elected in an even-numbered year.


Membership in the TTMAG is open to organisations that align with one of the recognised TTMAG Stakeholder Groups :
● Academia
● Civil Society
● Commercial / Business
● Government
● Technical Community / ICT Civil Society
● Foreign Based Organisations
Each Member Organisation in the TTMAG must have a primary representative and can have a secondary representative.
Currently, the TTMAG has 28 Member Organisations.

The Trinidad and Tobago Internet Governance Forum (TTIGF) is a forum for multistakeholder dialogue on public policy issues related to key elements of Internet governance issues, such as the Internet’s sustainability, robustness, security, stability and development.
The TTIGF is hosted every year since 2017 by the Trinidad and Tobago Multistakeholder Advisory Group (TTMAG).
Visit https://igf.tt to visit the TTIGF home site for videos, pictures and reports of past TTIGF events.
The TTMAG Board consists of representatives from various stakeholder groups, being two from ICT civil society groups, two from academia, two from professional entities, one from the Government or public sector, one from civil society, one legal, one from a Tobago-based entity and two from the .tt ccTLD holder.

The TTMAG has organisations which are in one of the following TTMAG Stakeholder Groups:
Each TTMAG Stakeholder Group selects 2 members to serve on the TTMAG Board, following a nomination and selection procedure.