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<font face="Verdana">The focus here is of one clear set of functions
- public policy making, that also, specifically decision making
vis a vis public polices... <br>
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If we need closures somewhere. Power does not disappear in absence
of legitimate governance. The Internet is right now being shaped
by the powerful for their benefit. <br>
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At one point we need to agree on should be taking decisions for
public policies. <br>
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And to reach that point faster than slower is more in the interest
to those most excluded in current power configurations..<br>
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parminder <br>
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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On Tuesday 15 April 2014 08:51 PM, Mike
Godwin (<a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:mgodwin@INTERNEWS.ORG">mgodwin@INTERNEWS.ORG</a>) wrote:<br>
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<div>Following a suggestion made by Carolina Rossini at a New
America Foundation panel she moderated, I mined Laura DeNardis’s
and Mark Raymond’s paper (“Thinking Clearly about
Multistakeholder Governance”) for its big chart of
“disaggregated internet governance” functions.</div>
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<div>I find it’s useful to look at this chart (somewhat clumsily
assembled by me and attached here as a PDF) and ask which of
these functions are best administered by multi-stakeholder
process, which are best administered by expert bodies (including
self-selected experts), which are best administered by
governments or intergovernmental entities, and so forth.</div>
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<div>Here’s a link to DeNardis’s talk about her new
internet-governance book:</div>
<div>The Global War for Internet Governance with Dr. Laura
DeNardis: </div>
<div><a moz-do-not-send="true" href="http://youtu.be/i_bZw-O7cC0">http://youtu.be/i_bZw-O7cC0</a></div>
<div> via @YouTube</div>
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<div>Unsurprisingly, DeNardis says there’s no one-size-fits-all
solution for administering every aspect of internet governance. </div>
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<div>—Mike</div>
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