[governance] multistakeholderism

Anriette Esterhuysen anriette at apc.org
Tue Aug 17 15:26:55 EDT 2010


Thanks very much for mentioning the Code of Good Practice, Lisa.

I will post an update.

Until then people can view the Code at http://www.intgovcode.org

I also attach a PDF version.

Anriette

On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 17:05 +0100, Lisa Hor
ner wrote:
> Hi all
> 
> Just a quick note in relation to Wolfgang's final point below about
> the Internet Rights and Principles coalition...
> 
> We're currently finalizing the first draft of a "Charter of Human
> Rights and Principles for the Internet".  The aim is to translate
> human rights standards to apply to the Internet, so the focus of the
> main section of the Charter is on the rights of individuals in
> relation to the Internet (whether online, connected or not currently
> using it).
> 
> In the second section of the Charter we've started to break down
> overarching rights down into specific principles, and also to define
> who has responsibility for upholding them.  This is relevant to
> Wolfgang's suggestion about creating guidelines for different
> stakeholders/actors/entities.
> 
> We haven't however started doing this for participation in internet
> governance, although that is included as a right in the first section
> of the Charter in the current version.  It would be great if people
> are interested in working on that as we move forwards. Might the
> APC/UNECE/CoE guidelines on participation serve as a starting point
> for this work?
> 
> Just a small aside related to the language we're using: We've had
> quite a lot of discussion on the IRP list about how we refer to
> different stakeholders and who actually has "rights".  In the
> coalition we're working firmly within the human rights framework which
> means that we're talking about the human rights of individuals. We're
> therefore not trying to explore or define legal rights for any other
> entities (e.g. states, companies), but rather focusing on their roles
> and responsibilities in upholding and advancing human rights.
> 
> We'll be consulting on the Charter during the dynamic coalition
> meeting at the IGF - it would be great to have people's participation
> in that.
> 
> All the best,
> Lisa
> ___________________________________________________________
> Lisa Horner
> Head of Research & Policy  Global Partners and Associates
> 338 City Road, London, EC1V 2PY, UK
> Office: + 44 207 239 8251     Mobile: +44 7867 795859
> LisaH at global-partners.co.uk  www.global-partners.co.uk
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: "Kleinwächter, Wolfgang" [mailto:wolfgang.kleinwaechter at medienkomm.uni-halle.de]
> Sent: 16 August 2010 19:45
> To: governance at lists.cpsr.org; Milton L Mueller; IGC; Avri Doria
> Subject: AW: [governance] multistakeholderism
> 
> Milton
> Let's not confuse the transitional form with the end state.
> 
> Wolfgang:
> Good point, Milton. The MS principle/process/dialogue is still in its infant stage. There is a long road to go. It emerged as the result of political process where governments (and private sector) realized that they can not manage the Internet alone. And it needs to be further enhanced. We moved from A to B but Z is still far away. What would be the alternative to MS? The right of the jungle?
> 
> Do not forget that the IG definition of the WGIG - which calls for an inclusion of all stakeholders in IG PDP - was a compromise between the Chinese position for "governmental leadership" and the US position for "private sector leadership". The "new beast" which emerged in the WSIS process and neutralized to a certain degree this black and white-conflict was the "civil society" which matured in the WSIS process ands produced a workable policy structures (Pleanry, Content&Theme Group, WGs, Buro etc.) and demonstrated its capacity for policy making with its Civil Society WSIS Declaration from 2003. I invite everzbody to go bacxk to this document and read it and remember how it emerged.
> 
> The weak point - both in the WSIS process, in the WGIG definition and also in ICANN - is that there are no procedures in place for a reasonable interaction among the stakeholders. Everything remains vague. If ALAC gives "advice" to the ICANN Board, what is the legal nature of such an ALAC advise?
> 
> Insofar, Daniel makes a good point by articulating the warning, that the @inclusion@ in a dialogue with more powerful partners can be counterproductive and justify one sided  power or profit oriented decisions by governments or corporations by refering to the "participation" (and consent?) of civil society in the dialogue. We know this from corrupt trade unions. But this does not speak against trade unions in general and against the usefulnees of dialogue among all involved parties, this calls for better procedures how the dialogue can be translated into policy decisions.
> 
> To enhance the system there is a need to draft such procedures for interaction. The IGF Dynamic Coalition on Rights and Principles can make a good contribution by propoising a set of rights and duties for governments, private corporations and civil society in Internet Governance. Such a MS IG Declaration could become a reference for cases where one stakeholder tries to misuse the presence of another stakeholder in the dialogue to justify illegitimate actions.
> 
> Wolfgang
> ____________________________________________________________
> You received this message as a subscriber on the list:
>      governance at lists.cpsr.org
> To be removed from the list, send any message to:
>      governance-unsubscribe at lists.cpsr.org
> 
> For all list information and functions, see:
>      http://lists.cpsr.org/lists/info/governance
> 
> Translate this email: http://translate.google.com/translate_t
> 
> ______________________________________________________________________
> This email has been scanned by the MessageLabs Email Security System.
> For more information please visit http://www.messagelabs.com/email
> ______________________________________________________________________
> ____________________________________________________________
> You received this message as a subscriber on the list:
>      governance at lists.cpsr.org
> To be removed from the list, send any message to:
>      governance-unsubscribe at lists.cpsr.org
> 
> For all list information and functions, see:
>      http://lists.cpsr.org/lists/info/governance
> 
> Translate this email: http://translate.google.com/translate_t

-- 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
anriette esterhuysen - executive director
association for progressive communications
p o box 29755 melville - south africa 2109
anriette at apc.org - tel/fax + 27 11 726 1692
http://www.apc.org

APC 1990-2010 www.apc.org
Thank you for helping make APC what it is today!
¡Gracias por hacer de APC lo que es hoy!
Merci d'avoir contribué à faire d'APC ce qu'elle est aujourd'hui!
____________________________________________________________
You received this message as a subscriber on the list:
     governance at lists.cpsr.org
To be removed from the list, send any message to:
     governance-unsubscribe at lists.cpsr.org

For all list information and functions, see:
     http://lists.cpsr.org/lists/info/governance

Translate this email: http://translate.google.com/translate_t
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: COGP_IG_Version_1.1_June2010.pdf
Type: application/pdf
Size: 217310 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.igcaucus.org/pipermail/governance/attachments/20100817/bce320c7/attachment.pdf>


More information about the Governance mailing list