<div dir="ltr"><div>There isn't anything on stakeholders roles, in particular States and USA.</div><div><br></div><div>Louis</div><div>- - -</div><div class="gmail_extra"><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Fri, Nov 28, 2014 at 8:21 AM, "Kleinwächter, Wolfgang" <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:wolfgang.kleinwaechter@medienkomm.uni-halle.de" target="_blank">wolfgang.kleinwaechter@medienkomm.uni-halle.de</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left-width:1px;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-style:solid;padding-left:1ex">Hi everybody<br>
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After weeks of confusing conflicts let´s move towards clarifying collaboration. What we have seen in the recent (sometimes unfriendly) disputes is that there are many different civil society activists with different civil society positions. This is confusing, both for newcomers who want to join civil society groups in Internet Governance discussions as well as for other stakeholders who want to collaborate with civil society. On the othher Hand: This is natural. The civil Society Stakeholder Groups has similar differences as the governmental stakeholder group if you compare the governmental positions of China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, US, EU, Brazil, India, Japan, Australia etc.<br>
This not the Problem. The probllem is that you have to know what the position. So it is about transparency and clarity.<br>
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Here is a proposal how to move forward: We have seen so many people writing long e-mails arguing for their position. Wouldn´t it be better if we use this energy to write more comprehensive and structured position or issue papers so that newbies or outsiders will better understand what the real points under discussions are in CS circles? We have seen rather different arguments around the same issue from JNC to APC and NCUC folks.<br>
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I propose that we start to work on what I call a “Civil Society Internet Governance Handbook”. This handbook would allow all CS groups within the CSCG to present their own individual points of views so that everybody knows what the positions are. The book could be structured into four main chapters:<br>
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1. Human Rights (Access, Freedom of Expression, Privacy etc.)<br>
2. Security (Cyberwar, Cyberterrorism, Cybercrime etc.)<br>
3. Economic Development (Market domination, competition, infrastructure development etc.)<br>
4. Technical Coordination (Names, Numbers, Protocols etc.)<br>
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Each of the six groups under the CSCG (IGC, BB, JNC, NCSG, Diplo, APC) could nominate four authors (one for each chapter). Each author would be free to argue for her/his position (five to maximum teen pages). There is no need for consensus. Every author would be free to present her/his radical, moderate, liberal and whatsoever position on one of the four main issues.<br>
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Such a compendium would help to bring more transparency into the process and would enable a more fact based discussion in the IG events ahead of us.<br>
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We could deliver this as an e-book (probably with an Annex with main official texts as Tunis Agenda, Sao Paulo Principles, UN Resolutions etc.) until the May 2015 Sessions in Geneva. In total this book would be around 250 pages. If we find a sponsor we could publish this for the New York event in December 2015. Such a book would seen by the rest of the IG Community as a helpful contribution, it would strengthen the role of CS in the emerging IG multistakeholder mechanisms and would be also an input into the WSIS 10+ process.<br>
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The chair of the CSCG (together with the co-chairs from the six groups) would be the editor.<br>
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Any comment?<br>
<span class=""><font color="#888888"><br>
Wolfgang<br></font></span></blockquote></div></div></div>