*** Democracies Online Newswire - http://www.e-democracy.org/do ***


Lots of interesting nuggets on the role of the "online public
commons" for many-to-many discussion within the context Internet
domain name governance.  It shows the value of the messy e-mail list
in the middle of Internet working structures.

Steven Clift
Democracies Online


------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
Date sent:              Wed, 20 Sep 2000 20:48:29 +0200
To:                     Steven Clift <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
From:                   Hans Klein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                Cyber-Federalist No.6: ORGANIZING THE ICANN MEMBERSHIP

                        Please forward
  ********************************************************
  CYBER-FEDERALIST       No. 6        September 21, 2000

     ORGANIZING THE ICANN MEMBERSHIP: REGIONAL FORUMS

             Civil Society Democracy Project (CivSoc)
   Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR)
                  http://www.civsoc.org

               The Internet Democracy Project
         http://www.internetdemocracyproject.org/
  ********************************************************

Last week the ICANN At Large membership activation ended, with the final
member count at 76,504.  Beginning on October 1 those 76,504 members will
elect 5 At Large Directors.

How will this membership function?  How will 76,504 voters connect with 5
Directors?  Can democracy in cyberspace work?

Even as our attention now turns to the October elections, it is important
to think of the long-term organization of the At Large Membership.

In this essay I discuss INTERMEDIATE INSTITUTIONS to connect voters with
directors.  Intermediate institutions would allow the At Large membership
to function even after the election.

The most pressing need is to define regional forums.  These would allow
members and Board candidates to easily interact.  More importantly, they
would provide the means for further self-organization by ICANN members.


What Functions Need to be Performed?
====================================
Elections perform two basic functions: input and accountability.  On the
one hand, voters can elect directors who bring their concerns and values to
the Board.  On the other hand, voters can vote out those directors who do
not represent them effectively.

However, elections occur at two-year intervals.  In the interim, these
functions need to be performed by other means.  Two other possible
mechanisms for connecting members and directors are an "At Large Assembly"
and an "At Large Forum."

At Large Assembly
=================
Between the voters and the directors there could be a representative
organization similar to the "councils" in the ICANN Supporting
Organizations (SO). The SO councils propose policies and ultimately elect
directors.

A council for the At Large membership was once proposed, but it was seen as
weakening members' legal rights and was abandoned.  The whole notion of an
At Large Council fell into disrepute.

Nonetheless, some kind of intermediate body would be useful, both to voters
and to directors.  An At Large ASSEMBLY could promote a connection with
voters, soliciting input, distilling it into proposals, and communicating
regularly to directors.  Likewise, such an assembly could hold directors
accountable, informing voters when questionable actions have taken place
and giving directors feedback on their actions.  An Assembly could share
some of the work of governance and provide a sounding board for ideas
before they are implemented.

However, the process for creating such a body is itself difficult.  What
representation mechanisms should be used?  How many members should there
be?  Before attempting to create an assembly, it might be easier to start
with a simple forum.

At Large Forum
==============
In Europe, ICANN members have succeeded in establishing a definitive forum
for their region. The ICANN-Europe listserv is the acknowledged location
for meeting other members, discussing issues, and disseminating news.
There one can find most active members and most Board candidates.
National-level forums have also developed, such as ICANN-France, which
feeds into ICANN-Europe. (Links to all lists mentioned here are below.)

Once the European Region director is elected, it seems likely that
ICANN-Europe will continue, allowing participants to provide input and
oversight of elected officials.  Furthermore, the entire list is archived
on the web, so it provides a public record of discussions and commitments.

ICANN-Europe provides a promising first step towards a European regional
assembly. In the self-organizing model so familiar on the Internet, the
creation of a definitive forum can allow consensus to develop about more
ambitious goals.  A regional forum can make possible the creation of a
regional assembly.  If enough regions move in this direction, it may be
possible to create a global At Large Assembly.

To the best of this writer's knowledge, no other region has a definitive
regional forum.  True, ICANN now offers the "Q+A" forum for elections.
However, that forum is difficult to use and is specific for the election.
Likewise, the "ICANN-announce" list shares information to members, but it
is under the exclusive control of ICANN.

In North America, no listserv has yet emerged as the definitive public
forum.  There are, however, at least three relevant lists. There is a
definitive private forum: the Boston Working Group list (BWG). Most leading
activists subscribe to the
BWG list, but subscriptions are limited. Perhaps the closest thing to a
regional forum is the International Forum for the White Paper (IFWP), which
was intensively used a few years ago but which is now little employed. A
third list is operated by the Association for Domain Owners Rights (ADORE).
 The ADORE list is not so well-known, but it open and archived. ADORE
recently offered to support a definitive North American regional forum.

Without a definitive North American forum, the process of self-organization
for the region could suffer.

Asia also does not seem to have a regional forum.  There is the
"ICANN-Asia" list hosted by JCA-NET in Japan, but discussion there is
light.  The JPNIC list in Japan may be more active, but it is in Japanese
language.

In Africa and Latin America this author knows of no lists.  Significantly,
even the ICANN Q+A Forum for Latin America had not received a single
posting at the time of this writing.

(If readers know of regional lists, they can provide feedback to the
Cyber-Federalist comments page and/or ask Board candidates to post the
URL's in the ICANN Q+A Forum.)

There are a number of global lists as well, although none of them have
gained recognition as definitive. The Civil Society Internet Forum hosts
one list.  The Unit for Internet Studies hosts another, on which policy
researchers from around the world communicate.  An ICANN-Candidates list
attempted to define a forum for all Board candidates, but it has not had
much discussion.  Two additional long-standing lists hosting global
discussion are the Individual Domain Name Holders constituency list (IDNO)
and the Domain Policy list.

In summary, ICANN-Europe seems to be the most promising model for a
definitive regional forum. Activists and board candidates subscribe to it,
so discussions there are important.  Moreover, the list is archived on the
web, so it constitutes a discussion of record.  The forum even has a draft
charter.  ICANN-Europe provides the means for further self-organization,
which could lead to the creation of a regional assembly.

Establishing Regional Forums
============================
It is in the collective interest of every region to establish a definitive
forum.  Moreover, creating a forum is easier than it first appears.

All board candidates and all members have an incentive to agree on a single
forum.  It helps candidates publicly debate issues and make contact with
voters. Candidates merely need to agree among themselves on a common forum.
 They may also consult with leading user groups and active members.

Means also exist to publicize the existence of a forum.  With the elections
now underway, all (or a majority of) candidates can announce their
agreement on a regional forum on ICANN's Q+A Forum.  Once defined, such a
list is likely to attract more subscribers and so grow into a definitive
forum.

A regional forum could be an existing listserv or a new one. Hosting a list
seems to confer little control over discussion, so it matters little who
the host is -- as long as they are technically reliable.

A bigger problem is excessive postings -- a "low signal to noise ratio."
Although this can be addressed by list moderation, moderation raises issues
of censorship.  Ultimately, a "forum of record" might consist of one list
made available in two forms: an open version and a moderated version of the
same list.  Both would be archived in web form.

A few weeks remain to put such lists in place in each region.  It simply
remains for Board candidates, activists, and an organization with listserv
and archiving capabilities to reach agreement and publicize it.

>From Regional Forum to Regional Assembly
========================================
If each ICANN region can establish a forum, then it will have put in place
the means for further self-organization.

Following the elections, participants may want to discuss the creation of a
regional Assembly with designated members.  That might require writing some
kind of charter that defines how the Assembly would be constituted, how
decisions would be made, and so on.  The regional assembly would be a more
formal intermediate institution between members and directors.

As described here, this process is roughly similar to that used to write
the charters for the ICANN Supporting Organizations (SO). (See
http://www.icann.org/general/bylaws.htm#VI).

It might be possible to create such intermediate institutions in time for
the ICANN Board meeting in Los Angeles in November.  Regional listservs
could be in place by the time of the October elections.  That would leave
four weeks to the Los Angeles Board meeting.  In those four weeks, it might
be possible for at least some regions to define assemblies.

At minimum, regional forums could help organize a Users Conference at the
Los Angeles Board meeting.  A Users Conference currently scheduled for the
Saturday before the main meeting (Nov. 11).  (Watch the www.CivSoc.org site
for more information.)  Using its forum, each region could organize part of
the program in the Users Conference.  This task might be a feasible
near-term goal for each region.  It would mark a first step in the
development of capabilities for collective decision-making.

The time is right to create regional forums.  Responsibility for the first
step lies with Board candidates.  This is an immediate opportunity for them
to help voters.

To get things started, ICANN members might pose the following question in
the ICANN Q+A Forum:

"Are you working with other candidates to define a regional forum?  What is
the URL?"

###

Cited Lists
===========
GLOBAL:
ICANN Q+A Forum  -- http://members.icann.org/qa.html
ICANN-announce   -- http://www.icann.org/announcements/
Civil Society Internet Forum (CSIF)  --
  http://www.civilsocietyinternetforum.org/lists.html
Unit for Internet Studies  --
  http://www.internetstudies.org/maillist.html
ICANN-candidates  -- http://www.egroups.com/icann-candidates
IDNO (Individual Domain Name Owners) --
  http://listserver.actrix.co.nz/mailman/listinfo/idno-discuss
Domain Policy  -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] (URL?)

EUROPE:
ICANN-Europe  -- http://www.fitug.de/icann-europe/
ICANN-France  -- http://www.egroups.com/group/icann-fra
ICANN-Europe draft charter  --
ftp://fitug.fitug.de/pub/icann-drafts/draft-roessler-icann-europe-charter-20
000911.txt

NORTH AMERICA:
Association for Domain Owners Rights (ADORE)  --
  http://ador-doc.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
Boston Working Group  -- http://www.cavebear.com/bwg/
International Forum for the White Paper -- http://www.ifwp.org/

ASIA/PACIFIC:
ICANN-asia-l  --
http://www.jca.apc.org/jca-net/activity/internet/icann/index-ja.html
JPNIC Internet Governance Study Group --
  http://www.nic.ad.jp/jp/member/ml/icann-d/

AFRICA:
unknown

LATIN AMERICA:
unknown

###

Candidates and readers are welcome to comment on this analysis.  Some
additional comments on Cyber-Federalist No.4 were made by Alf Hansen.  Some
comments on this issue have already been submitted.  See:
http://www.cyber-federalist.org

=========================================================

CYBER-FEDERALIST is a regularly published series of analyses and
commentaries on Internet governance and ICANN elections. It is produced as
part of the Internet Democracy Project. See:
    http://www.civsoc.org
    http://www.internetdemocracyproject.org/
    http://www.cyber-federalist.org  (archive)

The Cyber-Federalist is written by Hans Klein
    http://www.prism.gatech.edu/~hk28/

Subscribe to the CYBER-FEDERALIST!
  send an Email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

=========================================================





^               ^               ^                ^
Steven L. Clift    -    W: http://www.publicus.net
Minneapolis    -   -   -     E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Minnesota  -   -   -   -   -    T: +1.612.822.8667
USA    -   -   -   -   -   -   -     ICQ: 13789183


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