[governance] DMP} Statement on Process and Objectives for the Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance
Milton L Mueller
mueller at syr.edu
Sun Dec 1 13:15:58 EST 2013
Parminder,
2 questions for you.
1. By US laws you mean merely that ICANN is incorporated in California under its nonprofit corp law? That law does not make ICANN subject to US policy (although the MoU did, the IANA contract still does to some extent, and the Affirmation of Commitments also incorporates elements of US policy). Are you confusing policy with law?
2. If ICANN is incorporated under any other nation's laws, including Switzerland's, is it not also subject to a specific state's laws?
________________________________
From: governance-request at lists.igcaucus.org [governance-request at lists.igcaucus.org] on behalf of parminder [parminder at itforchange.net]
Sent: Friday, November 29, 2013 11:56 PM
To: governance at lists.igcaucus.org
Subject: Re: [governance] DMP} Statement on Process and Objectives for the Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance
On Saturday 30 November 2013 10:19 AM, Rafik Dammak wrote:
yes Milton it will make it the FIFA of IG world
Rafik
Rafik, do you in that case agree that ICANN should remain an US organisation, subject solely to US laws... parminder
2013/11/30 Milton L Mueller <mueller at syr.edu<mailto:mueller at syr.edu>>
No, no, no, please. That level of specificity is counterproductive at this stage. Many people who have studied this issue believe that turning ICANN into an INGO is the surest way for it to escape what little accountability it currently has. Those willing to go along with a general call for reform in ICANN’s US-centered oversight need not commit themselves to a particular solution at this point, and the language below does that.
Please don’t come up with off the cuff quickie solutions for this. It will take more than a scan of Wikipedia to solve.
From: michael gurstein [mailto:gurstein at gmail.com<mailto:gurstein at gmail.com>]
Sent: Friday, November 29, 2013 7:49 PM
To: governance at lists.igcaucus.org<mailto:governance at lists.igcaucus.org>; 'Tracy F. Hackshaw @ Google'
Cc: 'Norbert Bollow'; Milton L Mueller
Subject: RE: [governance] DMP} Statement on Process and Objectives for the Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance
What about
1) Transitioning ICANN and IANA to an International Non-Governmental Organization (INGO) status: The Global Meeting should aim at developing a suitable and widely acceptable means to achieve the desired transition of ICANN and IANA away from its links to the USG and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_nongovernmental_organization
M
From: governance-request at lists.igcaucus.org<mailto:governance-request at lists.igcaucus.org> [mailto:governance-request at lists.igcaucus.org] On Behalf Of Tracy F. Hackshaw @ Google
Sent: Friday, November 29, 2013 2:39 PM
To: governance at lists.igcaucus.org<mailto:governance at lists.igcaucus.org>
Cc: Norbert Bollow; Milton L Mueller
Subject: Re: [governance] DMP} Statement on Process and Objectives for the Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance
ICANN (and its President/CEO) have been "encouraged" at several opportunities to adjust its "internationalization" rhetoric/terminology and thus its resulting INTERNATIONALIZATION thrust to one which is significantly more embrasive of the objectives of, and indeed, spirit of what GLOBALIZATION in theory, intends to achieve.
I believe therefore that Milton's recommendation is timely and appropriate ... whether we use the term "Globalization" or a perhaps more compromising and less economics/free-market linked phrase or term such as "Global Integration", or more radically, "Glocalization".
------
Rgds,
Tracy
On Nov 29, 2013 4:52 PM, "Jean-Christophe NOTHIAS I The Global Journal" <jc.nothias at theglobaljournal.net<mailto:jc.nothias at theglobaljournal.net>> wrote:
Dear Norbert, Dear Milton,
If I may contribute, with a somehow different and unusual perspective, and in my humble Global Governance observer capacity, for the pleasure of the reflection:
Internationalization: one wants to have a larger international basis: more offices, more representatives, more of a network of local branches that, being put together, creates an international network. Still each element is mostly comparable to the starting point in terms of culture, thinking... Clones spread around the world? 'One for all' kind of uniformity. Meaning many little ICANNs all around.
Globalization: this could happen without a network of offices around the world. You can observe a very globalized entity containing so many different elements, co-exisiting, still assembling one strong outlet with a governance of its own, but embracing 'solutions' that could fit more than one single corporation, institution, nation. One voice, many voices... in a single global body. So one ICANN speaking from one point to the many in a global manner of thinking.
Meaning one ICANN with a big global mind.
Transnationalization: this tends to establish a community of people based in various locations, trying to forget about their local identity, interest or belonging, with the objective to address a more common, regional, transnational, trans-sectorial issue. A way to achieve an understanding of global magnitude.
Meaning one ICANN talking to other minds.
- The first option has a few advantages. You keep a greater control over the network, and at the end of the day, you can pretend to be a global minded outlet. Good communication value.
- The second option is probably the most difficult to achieve, specially if you are not starting from a fully independent culture. Very challenging when one starts from a private or national basis.
- The third option might be a good compromise, if each one puts trust in the other minds ('nods'?). But maybe a more sustainable approach, and ultimately, one that could deliver a true global minded system.
Obviously, very much to be criticized, but at least worth trying to explore. And quiet appropriate with the current state of the IG debate.
Semantic has a lasting effect over the narrative and the ultimate objective. A little bit like 'multistakeholder' which has emerged from the corporate jargon (to soften counter forces or opponents, executives would convene 'stakeholders' to the table for consultation (trade union, politician...). A pure communication tool. Plus, it has a very poor stable definition and understanding, and an even looser legal impact. Something that usually brings a lot of misunderstandings, deadlocks...
All the best,
__________________________
Jean-Christophe Nothias
Editor in Chief
jc.nothias at theglobaljournal.net<mailto:jc.nothias at theglobaljournal.net>
@jc_nothias
Le 29 nov. 2013 à 20:52, Norbert Bollow a écrit :
Am Fri, 29 Nov 2013 19:28:57 +0000
schrieb Milton L Mueller <mueller at syr.edu<mailto:mueller at syr.edu>>:
Recognizing that this is a late intervention (Thursday a big family
holiday in the US), is it possible to replace the word
"internationalization" with "globalization"? Increasingly we live in
a world where nations, and by extension the "inter-national" is not
an adequate term to define transborder, global phenomena
That's IMO a very valid point. Even though nation states and their
governments of course continue to have a significant role, it has
certainly become inadequate to try to understand transborder, global
phenomena by the method (that was helpful in earlier times) of
decomposing into what is happening at the national level plus what is
happening in inter-national trade and other areas of inter-national
relations.
On the other hand, many civil society people including myself are very
wary of the term "globalization", as globalization has often increased
social injustices while doing nothing to resolve the kinds of concerns
that the further "internationalization" of ICANN is intended to address.
Maybe yet another term could be used???
Greetings,
Norbert
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