An important part of the Berkman Center’s study of representation in
cyberspace is public participation.  We are asking a broad series of
questions  first collecting responses from a subset of volunteers, then
sending a sample of those responses to the lists to spark and focus general
discussion.  We are sending questions every three to four days, and reading
the lists to follow conversation there.  

Our first question asks about the objectives participants have in mind: By
what criteria should the study’s success later be judged?  

Initial responses have described three broad levels: the process of the
study itself, the report produced, and the membership structure proposed.
The following is a brief digest; the full text of comments received is
available on the RCS website: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/rcs/study.html .
 We look forward to reading more discussion.

PROCESS:
* “Success of the BCIS study will be in each of us feeling that we are
'heard'.” - Richard Bohn 

* “As the internet affects 100s of millions of individual users  their
participation should not be negated because they are not part of the
"establishment" / "power structure" or "large money interests"” - Steve Witkin

To reach a broader audience, the Berkman Center would appreciate if you
would forward our invitation to participate to others you know who might
not be on the lists.  
 
STUDY:
* “Thorough analysis of responses and proposed alternatives; quantification
of responses where appropriate.” - Ellen Rony   

* “Full transparency as to who the participants are and who they
represent.” - Joop Teernstra

* “Proposed options/solutions should be: simple and easy to understand,
transparent, practicable, guaranteeing balance (geography, gender,
functionality etc.)” - Wolfgang Kleinwaechter

* “The test is whether it provides an analysis of views and proposes
solutions which enable the different stakeholders and constituencies
either to reach broad consensus on a constitutional membership structure,
or to conclude that such a structure is not possible or not desirable.” -
Richard Swetenham

* “I believe that "advisory" success can be judged according to the
completeness of the research.” - Jim Galvin

MEMBERSHIP PROPOSALS:
* “Does it have "legs" to be a usable, wide-ranging study now and in the
future” - Robert Erickson

* “The effort should be considered a success if it results in a proposal
for a membership structure for ICANN that reflects the fact that while
ICANN has responsibilities to a very wide range of people from a very wide
range of locations, it also serves a vitally important operational role
which requires experience and expertise.” - Roger Cochetti

* “The study needs to ensure its proposals respect political aspirations of
good government and even start to reconceptualise government.  Key themes
of legitimacy, accountability, representation need to be addressed.” -
Brian Fitzgerald 

* “The study and its outcome should seem to give 'developing entities' a
particular opportunity to benefit from the capability and applications of
the Internet in general and the role of ICANN and its membership in
particular.” - Jens Jorgensen

* “A measure of the ratio of those who can be *effective* members over the
total number of people and entities which are impacted by a decision of
ICANN or an SO.” - Karl Auerbach

* “The first goal of BCIS study should be to devise an electoral system
that allows for a changing membership to represent future users who cannot
be envisioned right now.” - Nicholas Sullivan

* “By whether or not it can arrive, in a timely period, with a proposal to
ICANN for a method of admitting members to ICANN's at-large membership in a
way fair to the entire Internet community.” - Michael Sondow 

* “There should be a mechanism or mechanisms that will incorporate the
views of the relevant public in a way that is thoughtful or deliberative.”
- James Fishkin

Among the criteria we have heard so far: effective participation of diverse
interested parties, of individuals or economically small interests, of
international participants; dissemination of information, representation,
legitimacy, accountability, transparency, safeguard against capture,
flexibility, simplicity, balance, democracy, diversity.

The second question going to our volunteers list seeks to understand the
differing conceptions of what ICANN as an organization should do, and the
many visions of what membership entails: What should ICANN do for its
members, and what will members do for the organization?  



--
Wendy Seltzer
Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School
[EMAIL PROTECTED] || [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Representation in Cyberspace Study: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/rcs/


__________________________________________________
To receive the digest version instead, send a
blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To SUBSCRIBE forward this message to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNSUBSCRIBE, forward this message to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Problems/suggestions regarding this list? Email [EMAIL PROTECTED]
___END____________________________________________

Reply via email to