[discuss] NetMundial Initiative
"Kleinwächter, Wolfgang"
wolfgang.kleinwaechter at medienkomm.uni-halle.de
Fri Aug 22 15:44:30 UTC 2014
My understanding is that NMI is aimed to strengthen the IGF. The IGF needs strong supporters. And it is good that next to the dozens of (old and new) IGF supporters we have now also the WEF as a supporter. If the renewal of the IGF is pulled into the (intergovernmental) WSIS 10+ process the risk is high that the IGF could enter troubled waters. There are proposals by some UN member states, to bring IGF and the WSIS Forum under one umbrella (to save costs and resources). The WSIS 10+ process and its negotiations in New York will be done by governments only.
Istanbul and the NMI process should be used to find out how the IGF could become more sustainable, stable, better financed, better staffed and how we can move to a process which generates concrete output in a multistakeholder environment where stakeholders "share" decision making (as proposed by the Tunis Agenda). There are ideas for concrete output: Best practice guidelines for various issues, IG observatory, IG clearinghouse, IG watchdog etc.
However the NMI (as the IGF) has to proof that they are real multistakeholder processes (and not one- or two-stakeholder processes). With other words, it needs a strong and engaged civil society and academic community to counterbalance (intended or unintended) domination or capture by other stakeholder groups. As Bill says reading the NMI FAQ is useful. The door is open. What it needs is good ideas, reasonable actions and active engagement in the exploratory phase. And then lets see what we have end of February 2015.
Wolfgang
Hi
I don't think there is any intention or plausible scenario for the NMI to replace the IGF.
The FAQ is worth reading.
Best,
Bill
On Aug 21, 2014, at 8:03 PM, Stephanie Perrin <stephanie.perrin at mail.utoronto.ca> wrote:
> I don't know Jeremy, I don't think you are being cynical enough; I agree with your blog. Where oh where is civil society on the WEF website? I confess little or no expertise on the IGF, having last attended in person in 2006....but how does anyone think the IGF is going to get this issue back? If civil society is prepared to admit that IGF is the walking dead, what does anyone realistically think government and industry are likely to say?
> Personally, I don't think a fair bargain has been struck for the first ten years of IGF. No organization can survive with almost no funds, no staff, and no means off assisting its volunteers to attend and build initiatives. This is what we need to push for. That and getting the WEC to restrict its activities to fundraising among its members, to fund IGF.
> Cheers Stephanie Perrin
> On 14-08-21 1:30 PM, Jeremy Malcolm wrote:
>> On 21/08/2014 10:18 am, Avri Doria wrote:
>>> Web site updated.
>>>
>>> http://www.weforum.org/issues/global-internet-governance
>> Before seeing this I blogged with my personal thoughts about the
>> Initiative at
>> http://igfwatch.org/discussion-board/the-netmundial-initiative-exposed,
>> being my usual cranky self. Having now read the website update, I
>> wouldn't change much in what I had written, but I am pleased to read
>> that "there will be a six month period of
>> consultations with a broad range of stakeholders and experts regarding
>> whether and how to establish a dedicated organizational structure to
>> support these activities going forward, whether or not connected to the
>> Forum."
>>
>>
>>
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William J. Drake
International Fellow & Lecturer
Media Change & Innovation Division, IPMZ
University of Zurich, Switzerland
Chair, Noncommercial Users Constituency,
ICANN, www.ncuc.org
william.drake at uzh.ch (direct), wjdrake at gmail.com (lists),
www.williamdrake.org
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