Digital resilience as a prerequisite for continuity within the government

28 May 2026

Digital resilience as a prerequisite for continuity within the government

Anita Wehmann
Program Manager Digital Resilience and Digital Autonomy
Flevum Community Cyber Security & Business Continuity Cyber Security & Business Continuity Government

Partners of this Event

About the Topic

Within the Dutch Digitalization Strategy (NDS), digital resilience is a prerequisite for continuity. Yet, in practice, progress is often stalled by something that is not a technology problem, but an organizational one: silos. Security belongs to the CISO, IT belongs to IT, and continuity belongs to someone else entirely—and it is precisely in the gaps between them that major risks arise.

Anita Wehmann, Program Manager for Digital Resilience and Digital Autonomy at the Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations, observes this daily in her work: organizations that outsource responsibilities by outsourcing technology, yet lack a clear understanding of what is truly critical for their own survival.

Would you like to contribute your thoughts on how digital resilience can become a shared responsibility within organizations? Then we cordially invite you to participate in this private roundtable discussion.

Target Audience

Those responsible for Cyber Security, Business Continuity, and IT within the government and critical sectors

CPE Points | 2 points

Program

17:30 | Start of program (including presentation, discussion and 3-course dinner)
20:30 | End of formal program, opportunity for informal networking

Language: English

Location

Creative Valley Papendorp, Utrecht

About the speaker

Anita Wehmann

Anita Wehmann

Program Manager Digital Resilience and Digital Autonomy

Anita Wehmann is Program Manager for Digital Resilience and Digital Autonomy at the Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations (BZK). With forty years of experience within the government—thirty of which were spent in executive agencies—she has held various roles at the intersection of integrated security, privacy, quality, and cybersecurity.

Within BZK, she works on strengthening the digital resilience of the government based on the Dutch Digitalisation Strategy (NDS), with cybersecurity as a core component. Her focus lies on the administrative and organizational aspects of digital security: how do you ensure that continuity, security, and autonomy do not become fragmented, but instead remain anchored throughout the entire organization? Additionally, Anita Wehmann is co-chair of a European working group in the field of post-quantum cryptography.

More on the subject

Within the Dutch Digitalization Strategy (NDS), digital resilience is a prerequisite for continuity. Yet, in practice, progress is often stalled by something that is not a technology problem, but an organizational one: silos. Security belongs to the CISO, IT belongs to IT, and continuity belongs to someone else entirely—and it is precisely in the gaps between them that major risks arise.

Anita Wehmann, Program Manager for Digital Resilience and Digital Autonomy at the Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations (BZK), sees this daily in her work: organizations that outsource responsibilities by outsourcing technology, but lack a clear understanding of what is truly critical for their own survival. Her starting point is that digital resilience does not begin with tools, but with insight into which processes are truly business-critical, which IT assets support them, where dependencies lie (both internally and with suppliers), and who the administrative owner is.

During a roundtable discussion on May 28, we will engage with a select group of professionals from government and critical infrastructure to discuss questions such as:

  • How do we break down silos between business, IT, and security?
  • How do we distinguish ‘important’ from truly ‘critical’?
  • How do you maintain control over assets in a dynamic and outsourced IT landscape?
  • How do we make digital resilience a strategic organizational goal instead of a technical checkbox?

Would you like to contribute your thoughts on how digital resilience can become a shared responsibility within organizations? Then we cordially invite you to participate in this private roundtable discussion.