Europe is entering a phase in which resilience can no longer be treated as a strategic ambition; it is becoming an operational constraint. Systems are under sustained pressure, dependencies are more visible than ever, and stability is no longer the default condition. This first European DSR magazine is published into that reality: not as observation, but as participation.
This is not a standalone publication. It is structurally embedded in the European Resilience Summit series. Each edition sits between summits, in the space where momentum either consolidates or dissipates. The summits generate alignment; this magazine examines what remains once that alignment is exposed to time, complexity, and fragmentation.
At the core is a shift reshaping the European resilience debate. Resilience is no longer about robustness in stable systems, and sovereignty is no longer a binary state. As reflected in the work of Paul Hammer and Philipp Müller, the relevant question is operational: can systems still function under constraint? Not in theory, but when dependencies are stressed and coordination weakens.
The London Summit made this visible. What emerged was not a single breakthrough, but convergence across domains that are usually disconnected. The pattern was structural: Europe’s challenge lies less in isolated weaknesses than in fragmentation between otherwise strong systems. London did not resolve this tension, but it made it observable, and therefore actionable.
The next step is Vienna. Where London clarified the problem, Vienna will inevitably move closer to execution. The question is no longer what is happening, but what can be done with it; across borders, infrastructures, and institutional layers. The shift from understanding to implementation now defines the trajectory.
This magazine extends that trajectory beyond the summit cycle. Two contributions illustrate why that matters.
The first looks at Poland, where sovereignty is not conceptual but operational. On Europe’s eastern frontier, geopolitical pressure is constant rather than episodic. Here, digital resilience and national security converge in practice, revealing a structural asymmetry: resilience is unevenly distributed, and Europe’s edges often expose its core dependencies.
The second examines the Netherlands, where the acquisition of Solvinity by Kyndryl raises a subtler question. A standard market transaction becomes a test of digital autonomy in open economies. Where does economic logic end and strategic dependency begin, and how reversible are such shifts once embedded?
Taken together, these perspectives define the intent of this magazine: not to reduce complexity, but to structure it more precisely. Because European resilience is not defined by events. It is defined by how systems interact; under pressure, across borders, over time.
Welcome to that exploration.
04 Strategy
Why we founded the European Resilience Summit
05 Context
From London to Vienna
07 Geopolitical disruption
Cyber threats in a geopolitically unstable world
08 Arctic sovereignty
Why Greenland matters
09 Doc-Reads
New operating model for European resilience
11 Open source & open standards
Europe’s strategic lever for digital sovereignty
12 Elected autocracy
Journalists on the frontlines of digital repression
14 Human resilience
The human dimension of resilience in Europe’s digital age
15 Wrap-up
The key takeaways from London
16 DSR Magazine
Subscribe and stay connected to Digital Sovereignty & Resilience
17 Policy analysis
Poland’s digital sovereignty push
18 Lessons learned
A sovereignty clash in the Netherlands
20 Event update
This is the programme and Advisory Board
21 CIO networks
From national models to a European CIO fabric
22 Interview
Austrian CIO Clemens Möslinger about digital resilience
23 ERS Vienna
Where decisions on resilience take shape
24 Public Service Media
When broadcasting becomes critical infrastructure
25 European Resilience Summit
Program for 2026 & 2027
26 Horizon
ERS: From dialogue to direction
27 ERS The Hague
Save the date: June 18 2026
DSR is the leading European platform on Digital Sovereignty & Resilience. It is part of Dockland Media Group, which also includes the European Resilience Summit series, and LuteijnMedia.
Publishing companies
Dockland Media Group
20 Wenlock Road
London, N1 7GU
England
LuteijnMedia
Varenmeent 5
1218 AN Hilversum
The Netherlands
Publisher
Eric Luteijn
+31 35 20 41 000
eric@luteijnmedia.nl
Editor-in-Chief
Sander Hulsman
+31 6 28 33 04 15
sander@luteijnmedia.nl
Editorial staff
San Alexandrian, Michiel van Blommestein, Rashid Niamat
Final editing
SHcontent, Velserbroek, The Netherlands
Design
Wonderworks, Haarlem, The Netherlands
Sales
Paul Hammer
+44 744 339 13 65
p.hammer@docklandmediagroup.com
Eric Luteijn
+31 35 20 41 000
eric@luteijnmedia.nl
Contact
Copyright
Copyright to the content of this publication rests with Dockland Media Group, LuteijnMedia, or the respective authors/photographers.
01 DSR MAGAZINE
Edition 01 – April 2026
02 EDITOR’S NOTES
Table of contents & Colophon
04 Strategy
Why we founded the European Resilience Summit
05 Context
From London to Vienna
07 Geopolitical disruption
Cyber threats in a geopolitically unstable world
08 Arctic sovereignty
Why Greenland matters
09 Doc-Reads
New operating model for European resilience
11 Open source & open standards
Europe’s strategic lever for digital sovereignty
12 Elected autocracy
Journalists on the frontlines of digital repression
14 Human resilience
The human dimension of resilience in Europe’s digital age
15 Wrap-up
The key takeaways from London
16 DSR Magazine
Subscribe and stay connected to Digital Sovereignty & Resilience
17 Policy analysis
Poland’s digital sovereignty push
18 Lessons learned
A sovereignty clash in the Netherlands
20 Event update
This is the programme and Advisory Board
21 CIO networks
From national models to a European CIO fabric
22 Interview
Austrian CIO Clemens Möslinger about digital resilience
23 ERS Vienna
Where decisions on resilience take shape
24 Public Service Media
When broadcasting becomes critical infrastructure
25 European Resilience Summit
Program for 2026 & 2027
26 Horizon
ERS: From dialogue to direction
27 ERS The Hague
Save the date: June 18 2026