Forwarded from the WSIS civil society lists. >>> Adam Peake <[log in to unmask]> 8/28/2004 11:22:33 AM >>> The Internet governance caucus is drafting statements for the "Consultations on the establishment of the Working Group on Internet Governance (WGIG)" planned for Sept. 20-21 <http://www.itu.int/wsis/preparatory2/wgig/index.html>. The consultations will discuss the structure, working methodology and scope of the working group, and contributions on these should be made by September 13 (the address is <[log in to unmask]>) We expect the Sept. 20-21 consultations are also when we should be submitting names from civil society to join the WG. As a first step we have drafted a statement on the working group structure and some basic principles. The working group is important and contributions should be sent from civil society in WSIS, so we have prepared this draft for the content and themes list to consider and comment on. Comments by next Saturday, September 4 would be very helpful. We hope to draft some other comments on how the working group should go about its work and perhaps its scope later. We've also been discussing the qualities of people we think should be on the working group. And sometime very soon we need to start talking about names. More on this later. But anyone interested, please join the caucus list (List-Subscribe: <https://ssl.cpsr.org/mailman/listinfo/governance> or <mailto:[log in to unmask]>) The non-commercial users constituency of ICANN's Generic Names Supporting Organization (GNSO) has also started a process to select names (see <http://www.ncdnhc.org/> so if you would like to suggest names for the working group immediately, please look at the NCUC's process. I am sorry, the draft is quite long and we do not have resources to translate. I am not sure if a translation can be completed in time? Thank you, Adam and Jeanette Coordinators, Internet governance caucus (note about the text below: any line beginning + means it's an underlined sub-heading.) Draft WSIS Civil Society Internet Governance Caucus Contribution to the Working Group on Internet Governance (WGIG), first open consultation 20-21 September, 2004. Geneva Recommendations on General Structure and Operating Principles for the Working Group on Internet Governance (tentative introduction. This is the first in a series of contributions from the WSIS Civil Society Internet Governance Caucus and addresses the general structure and operating principles of the Working Group on Internet Governance. (TBC) The WSIS Civil Society Plenary has endorsed these recommendations?) 1. The Working Group on Internet Governance (WGIG) must be independent of WSIS Preparatory Committee Meetings (PrepComs) The final documents adopted in the Geneva phase (Declaration of Principles and Plan of Action) ask the Secretary General of the United Nations to set up a working group on Internet governance to prepare a report to be presented for consideration and appropriate action for the second phase of WSIS in Tunis in 2005. As such, the Working Group on Internet governance must operate under the auspices of the Secretary General and be independent of the WSIS PrepComs leading up to the Tunis Summit. 2. Basic composition of the working group + Membership of the working group must be balanced between participants from governments, the private sector and civil society, not favoring one group over any other The Geneva Summit Declaration of Principles and Plan of Action provide a basic outline of the structure of the working group. The Summit documents recommend that the working group ensure the full and active participation of governments, the private sector and civil society, from both developing and developed countries. + The working group should be large enough that its members bring the required experience and diversity, but not so large as to slow the pace of work The scope of the working group and time line it will work to has not been agreed. However, discussions to date strongly suggest that the working group will address a broad range of issues and will need to complete its work in a relatively short period of time. The working group membership will need a wide range of skills, be able to support active regional consultations and inquiries, and have necessary gender, linguistic and cultural diversity. The practical need to complete a heavy workload in a short period of time also suggests a working group with a relatively small membership. + The working group should not be a High Level Group, it should be constituted at the working level Practical considerations of compressed schedule, heavy workload, and need for a significant commitment of time over a short period suggests that the working group should be formed at the working level not as a High Level Group. + The working group should respect gender diversity These concepts lead us to the following suggested basic structure: Women and men with a high level of experience in international ICT policy making and the issues the WGIG will address, comprised of: * Six to 10 participants from Governments * Six to 10 participants from Civil Society * Six to 10 participants from the Private Sector * A Chairperson Governments, the private sector and civil society will be represented by an equal number of members: a WGIG of between 19 and 31 members. In addition, a limited number of participants from Intergovernmental and International Organizations and forums should be invited to join the working group as observers. We recommend that as far as reasonably possible, representation from governments, the private sector and civil society be divided equally between participants from developing and developed countries, (e.g. if each group is represented by eight members, then four would be from developing countries and four from developed, a total 12 members from developing countries and 12 members from developed.) Regional diversity will be an essential feature of the working group as it conducts consultations and gathers information. We suggest that where possible consideration should be given to ensuring balanced representation on the working group from the main geographic regions. Strong consideration must also be given to ensuring linguistic diversity in the group's membership. The working group should also be supported by permanent expert advisory groups and ad hoc expert consultations convened as the working group requires. Such groups and consultations would help to keep the working group small, efficient and functional while providing it with a broad range of input. 3. Basic operational principles + Members serve as peers The Geneva Summit documents ask the UN Secretary General to set up the working group. As such it is clear that the working group is not negotiating language on behalf of nations states, it supports the work of the Secretary General and as such members of the working group should serve as peers. + Ex Parte reporting procedures and public archives The working group should respect the governance principles suggested in the Geneva documents, i.e. that governance processes should be multilateral, transparent, democratic, and open to full participation by governments, the private sector and civil society. Consequently: * The working group should hold open public meetings where any interested individual may participate, either in person or remotely. * All submissions to the working group should be publicly archived. * Formal consultations between member or members of the working group and parties external to their home institutions should be summarized and made publicly available. * Reports of the working group, its interim and final proposals and decisions must reflect consideration of comments received and explain how those comments were taken into account. * The working group should accept substantive comments in all official UN languages and as many other languages as it can reasonably manage. + Objectives of the working group The main task of the working group is to develop a working definition of Internet governance and the public policy issues involved. The priority is for a working definition, not diplomatic text. The definition of long-term objectives would be very welcome, but an essential target should be recommendations applicable in the short term (one to two years). + Chair of the working group The Working Group on Internet Governance should be independent of the WSIS process. The process must be independent of political blocs and lobbies or risk a continuation of the deadlock experienced during the Geneva phase. As such we recommend that the chair (or dual chairs) should be from Civil Society and/or the Private Sector chosen with the following criteria in mind: * Recognized leadership in international, multi-sector groups * Non partisan personality * Coming from a developing country * Fluent in several UN languages + The Working Group on Internet Governance must be provided with necessary resources The Working Group on Internet Governance must be provided with resources necessary to achieve the tasks demanded by the Summit of the Geneva phase. In particular, resources should be made available to enable participation from developing countries and from civil society (irrespective of location), and for the translation of materials into major languages and interpretation at meetings. About the WSIS Civil Society Internet Governance Caucus The caucus was formed during WSIS PrepCom2, February 2003 to provide civil society with expert opinion on issues around Internet governance, and to represent civil society's views on Internet governance in WSIS. It is a means by which any interested organization or individual from civil society is able to contribute and participate, and provides a regular communication channel with other civil society caucuses and working groups and with the Civil Society Plenary. The Internet Governance Caucus is one of 29 such working groups established during the preparatory process of WSIS to provide civil society as a whole with expert advice on specific thematic issues. A Content and Themes Group coordinated the work of these content related entities, and this group and the Civil Society Plenary presented civil society's collective views. The Caucus made substantive written and spoken plenary contributions to the debate of Internet governance to the Summit in Geneva, and has been active in discussion in the WSIS Tunis phase. END first contribution.