NCSG & NPOC Colleagues,
In today's NCSG discussion with ICANN CEO Goran Marby a question was
raised about the impact of the U.S. Executive Order of the travel
freedom of Foreign (non-US) nationals on ICANN. I would like to add the
below as food for thought. This is the third sector research group I
have worked with for more than a decade. This is their brief statement:
Sam Lanfranco, NCSG/NPOC/ISTR
http://www.istr.org/news/330758/ISTR-Statement-on-Freedom-for-Academic-Exchange.htm
ISTR Statement on Freedom for Academic Exchange
Research associations, through their membership meetings, provide forums
in which participants exercise their freedom of scholarly expression and
debate. The International Society for Third Sector Research (ISTR),
made up of over 900 members from over 74 countries around the world,
regularly convenes to exchange knowledge and advance research on civil
society, nonprofit and nongovernmental organizations, and philanthropy.
Our expertise and insights are built upon freedom of expression,
association and travel. Our nations and communities are richer and
stronger because individuals have had assured rights to travel, to meet,
to speak and to publish, and to freely exchange knowledge and ideas.
The protection and exercise of these rights have been essential building
blocks of healthy and democratic civil societies.
As citizens as well as scholars of many countries around the globe, we
are alarmed and deeply disturbed by the Executive Order issued on
January 27, 2017, entitled, “Protecting the Nation from Foreign
Terrorist Entry into the United States.” We respectfully call upon the
administration to rescind this order. These travel restrictions exclude
global scholars from academic forums in our field and curtails our
freedom of scholarly expression. In addition, the targeted exclusion of
scholars from particular countries will negatively impact and seriously
hamper the advancement of knowledge and the resulting policies and
practices flowing from this knowledge in these areas of study.
As members of the board of directors of ISTR, and as scholars of civil
society, we issue this statement to express our alarm and deep concern,
particularly at a time when global democratic exchange is of utmost
importance. Our concern is for all of our colleagues who are prevented
from engaging in peaceful democratic discussion. We thus call upon our
colleagues, institutions, and governments to support democratic freedoms
and scholarly exchange.
Steven Rathgeb Smith, ISTR President
Ruth Phillips, ISTR President-Elect
Annette Zimmer, ISTR Past President
Margery B. Daniels, ISTR Executive Director
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