[governance] Workshop proposals for Vilnius
Tracy F. Hackshaw @ Google
tracyhackshaw at gmail.com
Mon Apr 5 07:17:34 EDT 2010
The two Workshop Proposals are excellent.
Perhaps the only recommendation would be to slightly modify the format of
the 1st Proposal by opening up to accept "revolutionary ideas" for
discussion PRIOR to the workshop commencement from any and all who would
like to contribute (using any or all means of online communication) and to
develop specific categories based on these ideas (and their likely trends or
similarities) for Workshop moderation ... this would likely lead to not
only a more organized and focused workshop, but also promote wider
involvement of all stakeholders (not physically present at the workshop) in
addition to those who would normally participate remotely.
Rgds,
Tracy
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 4:21 AM, Jeremy Malcolm <jeremy at ciroap.org> wrote:
> On 24/03/2010, at 8:57 PM, Fouad Bajwa wrote:
>
> > Jeremy: Kindly propose an improved language to the workshop proposal
> > so that IGC can collaboratively develop it into a very fruitful
> > discourse.
>
> Sorry for letting this slide for a while; I've been away. Anyway, there is
> very little I would change in Fouad's workshop proposal, but here are the
> two workshop proposals that are currently on the table for discussion, the
> second one now fleshed out a bit. Please provide any comments on these so
> that we can submit them both for the MAG's consideration by the 15th.
>
> WORKSHOP 1
> ==========
>
> Title: Revolutionary Internet Governance Ideas that can help change the
> Developing World
>
> Objective:
> A workshop that provides stakeholders the opportunity to share positive
> ideas for stimulating socio-economic change in the developing world
> utilizing the Internet. This will be a venue for both developed and
> developing world participants. An example may be the ideas presented by Tim
> Berners-Lee at TED for Opening Data to the world that helped in providing
> concrete relief information on the ground during the Haiti earthquake
> crisis. Another idea may be Google's mapping of the Sudan crisis.
>
> With the participation of all stakeholders, including youth, the workshop
> will record the many positive ideas that evolve from this venue, measure the
> changes that they have enabled over time, and at the next IGF meeting
> identify which ideas had the greatest impact over the past 12 months since
> presented.
>
> Format:
> A round table open to all participants of the workshop. The format will be
> 5 minutes given to each of the participants to share an existing or
> revolutionary idea. The Internet governance dimensions of each idea will
> also be explored. All the ideas will be recorded and categorized under
> various topics for measurement of impact over the following year.
>
> Organisers:
> Internet Governance Caucus
> [ISOC?]
> [OECD?]
>
> Contact: Fouad Bajwa, Jeremy Malcolm
>
>
> WORKSHOP 2
> ==========
> Title: Successes and failures of Internet governance, 1995 - 2010, and
> looking forward to WSIS 2015
>
> Objective:
> This workshop will compare the changing institutional and procedural
> approaches that have been applied to the problems of Internet governance
> over the last 15 years, and facilitate the sharing of various perspectives
> about the effectiveness and legitimacy of each approach. In each case
> reference will be made to the WSIS process criteria which recommend the full
> involvement of governments, the private sector, civil society, and
> international organizations in Internet governance arrangements.
>
> In parallel, the workshop will also look back to the period of 2003-2005
> when the first meetings of the World Summit on the Information Society
> (WSIS) was held, and forward to a future meeting in 2015. Questions to be
> asked include, would the same decisions about Internet governance that were
> made in 2005 have been made today, are the WSIS process criteria due for
> revision, and how will the role of private actors differ between the two
> summits?
>
> Format:
> The workshop will take a interactive panel format, beginning with brief
> presentations from experts from each of the stakeholder groups (including
> academia), followed by a moderated between panelists and the floor.
>
> Organisers:
> Internet Governance Caucus
> [Others - IT for Change, APC, CI?]
> [Government of France?]
> [Cisco?]
>
> Contact: Jeremy Malcolm, ...
>
> --
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