[governance] Inputs for synthesis paper
Parminder
parminder at itforchange.net
Sun Sep 7 06:26:08 EDT 2008
Lisa
>I wonder if there's also a way to stress that talking about building
rights-based IG shouldn't be seen as threatening to >companies and
governments, but rather that rights provide a set of international standards
and guiding principles that can >
>help to inform complex policy decisions. I'll have a think about that
one.!
I have added the following para to the document, in its closing part.
"A rights-based IG shouldn't be seen as threatening to governments or
companies, but rather rights provide a set of international standards and
guiding principles that can help to inform complex policy decisions. It is
pertinent to recollect that WSIS called for a people-centric information
society, and a rights framework helps develop people-centric IG agenda and
polices."
Parminder
_____
From: Lisa Horner [mailto:lisa at global-partners.co.uk]
Sent: Friday, September 05, 2008 8:12 PM
To: governance at lists.cpsr.org
Subject: RE: [governance] Inputs for synthesis paper
Hi
Yes, we have done an initial mapping of initiatives that aim to set
values-based standards or principles for communications environments. This
was to feed into our own initiative, the Freedom of expression project,
which aims to link a range of important communications policy issues to the
international rights system and promote policy dialogue around them. You
can download the paper at
http://www.freedomofexpression.org.uk/resources/mapping+existing+agreements+
and+principles (forgive the sketchy quality of the diagram!)
The paper is only an initial attempt to map the field, and is intended as a
rolling document to be added to and updated as we go along. So
contributions from caucus members into this process would be very welcome.or
comments and suggestions of how to make this or something similar a more
useful tool for the caucus and wider IGF.
I like the version of the Rights synthesis paper as it stands on the wiki at
the moment. I agree that it's important to refer to the
disagreements/different interpretations of rights that exist, and that this
makes it all the more important that rights are explicitly on the agenda for
discussion at the IGF. I wonder if there's also a way to stress that
talking about building rights-based IG shouldn't be seen as threatening to
companies and governments, but rather that rights provide a set of
international standards and guiding principles that can help to inform
complex policy decisions. I'll have a think about that one.!
Thanks,
Lisa
From: karen banks [mailto:karenb at gn.apc.org]
Sent: 05 September 2008 14:54
To: governance at lists.cpsr.org; Milton L Mueller; governance at lists.cpsr.org;
Parminder
Cc: Lisa Horner
Subject: RE: [governance] Inputs for synthesis paper
hi milton, all
in terms of defining rights.. just to remind (and apologies if i sound like
a broken record) that several groups now have attempted to do this including
APC, the BOR coalition, global partners, UNESCO, the work of the WSIS CS
Human Rights caucus and the CRIS campaign
so let's build on the collective work done this past 10 years or so
if i recall correctly (lisa - please correct me if i'm wrong) - global
partners put together a document that mapped such documents.. it might be
useful to refer to that (and update if necessary) in this work
i think we have a good chance of influencing the cairo agenda if we build
this work carefully and inclusively (not to suggest we aren't already) over
the next 6-12 months
karen
At 19:51 04/09/2008, Milton L Mueller wrote:
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OK, I just made some extensive edits to the rights statement. A lot of the
small stuff was editorial, there was redundancy and awkwardness in many
sentences, perhaps reflecting the fragmentary approach of a shared doc. I
hope people agree on the stylistic improvements.
Substantively, I tried to do two things:
First, make it clearer that the definition and application of rights talk is
contested and complicated -- and use that to bolster the argument that that
makes it a good focus for IGF Egypt. In line with this, I added a quotation
from the Tunis Agenda at the beginning.
Second, group and expand certain discussions to run in a more coherent and
structured manner. For example, there were scattered references to privacy
which I tried to consolidate in a single para. and expand a bit.
For those not on the Google docs list I append the statement below
Milton Mueller
Professor, Syracuse University School of Information Studies
XS4All Professor, Delft University of Technology
------------------------------
Internet Governance Project:
http://internetgovernance.org
IGC's input -1 to the synthesis paper for IGF, <?xml:namespace prefix = st1
ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />Hyderabad.
'Rights and the Internet' as the over-arching theme for IGF-4 in Egypt
The Tunis Agenda (para. 42) invoked human rights when it reaffirmed a global
"commitment to the freedom to seek, receive, impart and use information" and
affirmed that "measures undertaken to ensure Internet stability and
security, to fight cybercrime and to counter spam, must protect and respect
the provisions for privacy and freedom of expression as contained in the
relevant parts of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Geneva
Declaration of Principles." However, little follow up work has been done to
enact these commitments to basic human rights in Internet governance.
The Internet Governance Caucus strongly recommends that 'Rights and the
Internet' be made the overarching theme for IGF-4 in Egypt, and that the
IGF-4's program be framed by the goal of developing a rights-based discourse
in the area of Internet Governance. The Caucus has already expressed support
for the letter on this subject which was sent to the MAG by the Dynamic
Coalition on an Internet Bill of Rights. The IGC offers the IGF assistance
in helping to shape such a discourse at the IGF meetings, and specifically
to help make 'Rights and the Internet' an overarching theme for IGF-4 in
Egypt.
A complex new emerging ecology of rights and the internet
One important purpose of a discourse on rights should be to clarify and
reach greater consensus on how Internet rights are defined, how they relate
to pre-existing definitions of human rights, and which ones need to be
internationally recognized and strengthened. There are currently basic
philosophical differences, even among civil society actors, over what
constitutes a right and whether human rights inhere only in individuals or
can also be assigned to collectivities.
The openness and diversity of the internet are underpinned by widely
recognized (but still imperfectly enforced) basic human rights: the
individual right to freedom of expression and to privacy. To some,
conceptions of rights and the internet may also extend to the area of
positive and collective rights - for instance a right to Internet access, or
a right of cultural expression - including the right to have an Internet in
ones own language, which can inform the important IGF thematic area of
cultural diversity. Others contest these positive and collective claims,
viewing them as worthy policy goals but not as rights.
Many important internet policy areas, like network neutrality, are being
framed in terms of rights, such as a right to access and share information,
or as an extension of freedom of expression itself. The right of the public
to access government-produced information presents itself in a wholly new
manner in a digital environment, where information is often publicly
sharable at little or no extra cost. Positive acts of withholding digital
public information from citizens in fact can be looked upon as a form of
censorship. All of these rights-based conceptions may be included in the IGF
openness theme area. Other rights such as the right of association and the
right to political participation may have important new implications in the
internet age, including the right to participate in the shaping of globally
applicable internet policies.
While the internet opens unprecedented economic, social and political
opportunities in many areas, many fear that it may at the same time be
further widening economic, social and political divides. It is for this
reason that development has been a central theme for the IGF meetings to
date. In this new, more global and digital context it might be useful to
explore what the term "right to development" means.
With respect to privacy rights, corporations and governments are
increasingly able to extend digital tentacles into people's homes and
personal devices, in manners invisible to consumers and citizens.Consumers
of digital products thus face new challenges including the right to know and
completely 'own' the products and services they pay for. Technological
measures to monitor and control user behavior on the internet is becoming
increasingly sophisticated, and often outrun public policies and traditional
concepts of what rights users have.
While property rights are of considerable importance, their applicability
and mutations in the the digital environment have led to widespread
political contention over the proper scope of copyrights, trademarks and
patents. In fact, intellectual property is emerging as a primary area of
socio-economic conflict in the information society. The IGF can explore
issues surrounding the public interest principles which underpin IPR
alongside the concept of a right to access knowledge in the digital space.
It can also explore how individuals' property right to own, build, test, and
use consumer electronics, computers and other forms of equipment can be
reconciled with the regulation of technical circumvention to protect
copyrights.
We recognize that while it is relatively easy to articulate and claim
"rights" it is much more difficult to implement and enforce them. We also
recognize that rights claims can sometimes conflict or compete with each
other. For example, a claim that there is a "right to Internet access" may
imply an obligation on states to fund and provide such access, but it is
likely that if states are responsible for supplying internet access that
there will also be strong pressures on them to exert controls over what
content users can access using public funds and facilities. There can also
be uncertainty about the proper application of a rights claim to a factual
situation. The change in the technical methods of communication often
undermines pre-existing understandings of how to apply legal categories.
These complexities, however, only strengthen the case for using the IGF to
explicitly discuss and debate these problems. There is no other global forum
where such issues can be raised and explored in a non-binding context.
Internet governance has up to this time largely been founded in technical
principles and, increasingly, on the internet's functionality as a giant
global marketplace. With the internet becoming increasingly central to many
social and political institutions, an alternative foundation and conceptual
framework for IG can be explored. It is the view of the IG Caucus that a
right-based framework will be may be appropriate for this purpose.
It is the Caucus' view that the IGF is the forum best suited to take up
this task. This process should start at the IGF Hyderabad, where workshops
on rights issues are being planned. These issues will also hopefully figure
prominently in the main sessions. The IGC fully expects that these
discussions will help the IGF work towards developing 'Rights and the
Internet' as the over-arching theme of the IGF-4 in Egypt.
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