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Wsis 2 -- "Unilateral globalization" model of 'Net governance is new - says Hans Klein, Internet & Public Policy Project
by Wsis NetiZen on 2005, November 24 - 5:18am November 23, 2005
An Assessment of the WSIS-2/Tunis ‘05 Outcomes Hans Klein, INternet and Public Policy Project http://www.ip3.gatech.edu/ The outcomes of the Tunis World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) are significant -- and rather surprising. ICANN emerges from the summit both unchanged and significantly different. After WSIS it has a stronger claim to legitimacy. ICANN emerged unchanged, in that its institutional structures – most notably its mechanisms for political oversight – were not amended. ICANN continues to operate under the formal authority of a single government, the US. Such a unilateral globalization model is a novel arrangement, quite unlike what is used in other global sectors (e.g. telephony or communication satellites.) The US continues to exercise a kind of unipolar authority it does not have in physical space. USA delegation to Wsis Press Note ( see for Human Rights comments): Nov. 18
by Wsis NetiZen on 2005, November 23 - 3:04pm U.S. DELEGATION TO WSIS - PRESS NOTE
Tunis, Tunisia November 18, 2005 Press Note: Nov. 18, 2005 As the second phase of the World Summit on the Information Society draws to a close, the U.S. delegation wishes to express its thanks to the Tunisian organizers and the Tunisian people for having succeeded in the considerable logistical challenges of hosting the event. The World Summit on the Information Society provided the world with an opportunity to discuss two vitally important issues – how to bring the benefits of information technology to the developing world and how to ensure a free flow of information that is critical to the success of the Internet. Wsis Civil Society Statement Draft V3.1 - Comment today (Dec. 1,2005)
by Wsis NetiZen on 2005, November 22 - 12:30pm WSIS Civil Society Statement DRAFT V3.1
last change: TIME \30/11/2005 18:52 CET I. Introduction – Our perspective after the WSIS process The WSIS was an opportunity for a wide range of actors to work together to develop principles and prioritise actions that would lead to democratic, inclusive, participatory and development-oriented information societies; societies in which the ability to access, share and communicate information and knowledge is treated as a public good and takes place in a ways that strengthens the rich cultural diversity of our world. Canada spoke Nov 17 at Wsis 2
by Wsis NetiZen on 2005, November 17 - 1:09pm The archive netcast from Wsis 2 will be posted here
http://www.itu.int/wsis/tunis/webcast/archives/index.html Live coverage of Wsis 2 is here: http://www.itu.int/wsis/tunis/webcast/english/index.html# Preliminary themes Basic motto : Let's work together! (Fr) development, creativity and innovation, Marshall McLuhan, freedom of reception and expression, all restrictions on human rights by countries are against UN charter, and with respect to Internet prevent vitality, and frustrate creativity and diversity. UN Human rights rapporteurs urgently call for Tunisia to respect fundamental rights and freedoms
by Wsis NetiZen on 2005, November 16 - 1:16pm New York, Nov 16 2005 10:00AM
On the same day that the United Nations world information summit opened in Tunisia, three UN human rights experts today urgently called on the North African county's Government to take immediate steps to respect the fundamental freedom of expression in the face of reports of serious abuses. They urged that the holding of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in Tunis serve as "an opportunity to reinforce freedom of opinion and expression in Tunisia so that human rights defenders, judges, lawyers and journalists can successfully carry out their activities in a secure, free and constructive climate." Wsis 2 Round table topics: Action, Implementation and follow up?
by Wsis NetiZen on 2005, November 16 - 6:14am Theme of round tables
The round tables are organized around the overarching theme: "From Commitment to Action: Implementation after Tunis". The cluster of issues associated with the overarching theme is meant to provide guidance for participants, thereby ensuring focus and coherence in each session. The following is an indicative list of topics, which the moderators will use to help guide discussions: Human Rights Watch: Dispatch from Tunis: A Tale of Two Press Conferences
by Wsis NetiZen on 2005, November 16 - 5:50am Dispatch from Tunis: A Tale of Two Press Conferences
16 Nov 2005 00:55:21 GMT Source: Human Rights Watch < http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/HRW/7123fd6893fc520c944826dfb5110f62.htm > (WSIS). The international and local reaction continued today, as diplomats fumed, some civil society organizations cancelled their events at the U.N. conference, and Human Rights Watch held two press conferences, one for journalists with WSIS badges, the other for Tunisian and international journalists and advocates who did not attend WSIS. Overnight the international press publicized the crude efforts of the Tunisian government to thwart Tunisian and international civil society organizations' plans to hold an alternate meeting to discuss Internet issues in Tunisia alongside the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS). Early in the day, international NGOs that had scheduled official WSIS events but also supported the alternative Citizens Summit began to announce the cancellation of their official events at WSIS. Rather than present their prepared panels on freedom of expression or gender equity, some accredited NGOs chose instead to focus attention on the thuggish treatment by Tunisian police to advocates, journalists and diplomats who tried to meet to plan the Citizens Summit at various locations in Tunis. At a press conference in the WSIS center to announce this protest, Mouldi Mbarek, the editor of La Presse, a pro-government French language daily in Tunisia, broke into a prolonged harangue on why these groups didn't focus their energy on immigration discrimination in France, taking up the last minutes until the next event. Internet Governance: CS Call for oversight Nov. 14
by Wsis NetiZen on 2005, November 16 - 2:36am Internet Oversight: Keep the Internet Free, Innovative and Affordable
Statement by Wolfgang Kleinwächter, University of Aarhus, on behalf of the Civil Society Internet Governance Caucus at the 4th meeting of the Sub-Committte A of the resumed PrepCom3, Tunis, November, 14, 2005 Thank you Mr. Chairman for giving me the floor. My name is Wolfgang Kleinwächter. I am a professor for international communication policy at the University of Aarhus. I am also a co-founder of the Civil Society Internet Governance Caucus and I was a member of UN Working Group on Internet Governance (WGIG). Let me say some words on the Internet oversight function. |