[bestbits] Draft submission on 2014 IGF

Fouad Bajwa fouadbajwa at gmail.com
Sun Jan 19 09:40:49 EST 2014


Dear Jeremy,

Thanks for putting together this important submission and taking out
the time needed from your busy schedule on behalf of the group.

Where I am very comfortable of most of the text, I believe there is an
evident need to voice developing country concerns. The notion of human
rights varies in different developing contexts and regions and
especially in the muslim world where there is a continuous challenge
to understand the pluralism online and its contextual impacts on
society, socio-religion, socio-culture, economic and political
environments.

What has been happening in the Middle East and the Youtube and
frequent bans of other content in Pakistan are examples of the
pluralism and the struggle to come to terms with. As such issues have
been covered during BestBits and other workshops occasionally at IGF
and regional IGFs, it would be prudent to help bring the IGF focus
back to the developing context and reducing the talk-shop and
defensive tactics of the develop world lobby groups, interest groups
and private sector. Developing world participation is still a
challenge and there really haven't been visible efforts beyond remote
participation and some fellowship programs to improve the situation.
Somehow I am able to draw such a view from the present text.

On Sun, Jan 19, 2014 at 2:07 PM, Jeremy Malcolm <jeremy at ciroap.org> wrote:
> I am offering this as the basis for a proposed joint submission to the IGF
> on proposals for the 2014 meeting.  I will put it up on a pad for
> amendments, but I'm mailing it around for initial comments first.
>
> Whilst the preamble is new, for the recommendations I've tried to draw on
> and summarise the main points of previous papers or submissions taking stock
> of the IGF including "Notes on an IGF Plus" that was contributed to our Bali
> meeting.  It goes beyond fiddling with the themes, to suggest some of the
> more significant changes that the IGF will need to become more useful.  We
> do not need to achieve a full consensus on this, but as many of you as
> possible should be able to support it.
>
> The IGF has always struck a balance between continuity and incremental
> improvement in its themes and format.  But overall, over nine years since
> the first meeting in 2006, whilst the names of themes and sessions formats
> have changed, there has been relatively little change in their substance.
> The IGF is still a discontinuous, face-to-face, four day meeting, composed
> of overlapping main sessions and workshops.  For those who do not admit of
> gaps in current Internet governance arrangements or do not desire for those
> gaps to be filled by a natively multi-stakeholder institution, the IGF's
> resistance to change is neither a problem, nor a coincidence.
>
> But in the wake of revelations of major systemic flaws in present
> arrangements that have enabled systematic human rights abuses of Internet
> users, the recognition of governance gaps has become more widespread and
> inspired more urgency for significant reform.  This has fuelled discussions
> outside of the IGF, such as the CSTD Working Group on Enhanced Cooperation
> and the Brazil Multi-stakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet
> Governance, yet in those discussions, the possibility of a reformed IGF
> taking a more significant role in future Internet governance arrangements
> continues to come up.
>
> The IGF is challenged to respond to this call for more substantial reform to
> its processes, and there is no better time to do this than in preparation
> for its ninth meeting in Istanbul in September 2014, following on from the
> Brazil meeting, and heading towards its second review by the UN General
> Assembly.  With an entirely new IGF MAG also in place for 2014, the
> opportunity exists for a fresh start, in which a number of unchallenged
> assumptions about how the IGF should operate can be critically examined
> again, and new ideas tried out.  Yet none of the suggestions for reform
> given here are actually new.  Several of them have been made every year
> since the IGF's formation in 2006, or earlier, but have never been adopted
> before now.  The following are actionable immediately, without any need for
> change to the IGF's mandate:
>
> Themes
>
> The main theme of the 2014 IGF should be to discuss, and if appropriate
> affirm and commit to implementing the recommendations from the Brazil
> Multi-stakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance.
> In general, the IGF should address policy questions that are controversial
> and/or time-critical, and that currently lack any other multi-stakeholder
> mechanism for global coordination.  It should avoid themes that are too
> broadly framed like "openness" and "security" that are not grounded in any
> specific real-life context.
> Themes and outputs should be explicitly shared between the global IGF and
> the regional and national IGFs, so that they can feed into and reinforce
> each other, without this detracting from the ability of the latter to also
> deal with more specialised regional and national issues.
>
>
> Session formats
>
> To make the IGF more practically useful, designated workshops should be
> dedicated to developing non-binding opinions, recommending policy principles
> that stakeholders can follow to address pressing current issues.  Workshop
> report formats should be standardised so that these recommendations, how
> they were arrived at, and any areas of divergence, can be easily
> communicated.
> There should be a reduction in the number of parallel workshops, to a more
> manageable number of purposeful workshops with more focus on the main themes
> selected for the meeting.
> Main sessions can and should also be used to develop outputs on the most
> important issues of cross-cutting importance.  A number of Best Bits
> participants described one simple way in which such a session could work, in
> a statement issued on 20 May 2013 that is available at
> http://bestbits.net/igf-opinions/.  Speed dialogues were another method
> considered by the MAG in the past, but never tried.
> To that end, main sessions and workshops should be separated.  When these
> overlap each other, it becomes impossible for all interested IGF
> participants to join together to address important shared issues in an
> outcome-oriented, deliberative plenary session.
>
>
> Online deliberation
>
> The IGF should address its incapacity to sustain a work programme between
> meetings.  A step towards this can be made very easily by offering IGF
> participants, when registering for the meeting or following it remotely, the
> opportunity to join an online collaborative platform for interacting with
> other participants throughout the year on issues of shared concern.
> Such a reform would add much value for online participants, essentially
> providing an online and intersessional equivalent of the annual IGF meeting.
> Currently, online participants have little incentive to invest in the IGF,
> because they are not granted the same status as those who attend the
> face-to-face meetings.
> Data from the IGF (including calendar data, publicly-available participant
> data, meeting transcripts, and working documents) should all be made
> available in open data formats.
> It is vital that the development of the IGF's online platform be adequately
> resourced.  Even so, it would only incur a small fraction of the expense of
> the annual meeting, and need not be elaborate: for example, in other
> Internet governance institutions, participants are encouraged to join
> mailing lists, whereas most IGF participants are never offered that
> opportunity.  Whilst individual stakeholders have attempted to provide
> community-based platforms for the IGF in the past, these have not been
> supported or publicised by the Secretariat.
>
>
> Management structure
>
> The Secretariat and the MAG conceived as a programme committee, are not
> sufficient high level structures for the IGF.  In particular the
> reappointment of a Special Advisor as Chair is important to provide a
> charismatic public face for the IGF as well as a formal interface with the
> United Nations system and other high-level stakeholder representatives.  A
> Special Advisor will also make it easier to attract funding for the event,
> and to provide leadership as the IGF undergoes necessary changes.
> The Tunis Agenda called for the IGF to have a bureau, which was never formed
> for fear that this connoted an intergovernmental governing structure.
> Whilst the name is not important, there is no warrant for the MAG to be
> limited to the role of a programme committee, as it is now.  It is also
> important for a multi-stakeholder committee of the IGF to perform
> substantive tasks such as:
>
> liaising with external bodies including national and regional IGFs (pursuant
> to IGF mandate 72(c));
> defining orphan issues and other areas in need of research or deliberation;
> preparing or approving balanced briefing materials on issues to be addressed
> by the IGF;
> assessing the extent of consensus reached on proposed IGF outputs presented
> at a main session;
> reviewing and ensure the accountability of all fora involved in Internet
> governance (pursuant to IGF mandate 72(i));
> establishing ad hoc working groups; and
> preparing an annual report.
>
> For some of these tasks, it may be that smaller working groups of the larger
> MAG could perform them more efficiently than the full MAG.  For others, the
> more organisational tasks should be offloaded to the Secretariat, allowing
> the MAG to perform more of a steering and oversight role.
> The MAG representatives should be appointed directly by the stakeholder
> groups without the intermediation of the UN Secretary General.  Whilst the
> involvement of the UN was important to bootstrap the fledgling IGF, it can
> now stand on its own two feet and appoint its own representatives, through
> processes devolved to the stakeholder groups themselves.
>
>
> Funding
>
> A more flexible mechanism for funding the IGF is needed.  The terms and
> conditions on which UN DESA accepts contributions to the IGF are
> unfavourable to donors, they lack transparency, and also limit the ability
> of participants to contribute small sums.  There is no reason why a pool of
> funding separate to that administered by UN DESA could not be set up and
> administered transparently by a multi-stakeholder working group under the
> MAG's oversight.
> Host country agreements should be made public, and host countries should be
> permitted to open tenders for non-security-essential services publicly,
> rather than being required to take these from UN DESA.
>
>
> The deadline is 10 February 2014.  Please send your initial comments and
> then I'll put this up on a pad.
>
> --
>
> Dr Jeremy Malcolm
> Senior Policy Officer
> Consumers International | the global campaigning voice for consumers
> Office for Asia-Pacific and the Middle East
> Lot 5-1 Wisma WIM, 7 Jalan Abang Haji Openg, TTDI, 60000 Kuala Lumpur,
> Malaysia
> Tel: +60 3 7726 1599
>
> WCRD 2014 - Fix Our Phone Rights! | http://consint.info/fix-our-phone-rights
>
> @Consumers_Int | www.consumersinternational.org |
> www.facebook.com/consumersinternational
>
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-- 
Regards.
--------------------------
Fouad Bajwa
ICT4D and Internet Governance Advisor
My Blog: Internet's Governance: http://internetsgovernance.blogspot.com/
Follow my Tweets: http://twitter.com/fouadbajwa


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