Charter drafts - and the related process so far => NCUC/ALAC
Jeanette Hofmann
jeanette at WZB.EU
Fri Jul 24 16:56:57 CEST 2009
> One thing that I found particularly depressing in the comments was the
> ALAC leadership's decision to endorse the SIC/staff version, and to
> dismiss NCUC's model as some sort of capture strategy on the part of an
> apparently evil cabal (that's us, I guess).
Hi Bill, are you refering to Cheryl's statement?
http://forum.icann.org/lists/gnso-stakeholder-charters/msg00067.html
I've been told that it is not an ALAC statement since ALAC didn't
discuss this matter. What is more, it is not, as Cheryl claims, a
synopsis of former statements as it clearly contradicts other positions
of ALAC. Since I am not an EURALO member anymore, I cannot point this
out to the membership but I've asked two other members to do something
about Cheryl's statement.
jeanette
The former is despite the
> fact that ALAC earlier disavowed the CP80 proposal, which the SIC/staff
> version actually mirrors in important respects. Go ahead and figure
> that one out. It is notable too that this is despite the fact that ALAC
> leadership has not sought any sort of dialogue with NCUC to arrive at a
> shared understanding of the alternative models, and despite the lack of
> any real dialogue within ALAC on the relative merits of the two models
> geared to eliciting a broadly supported verdict. I have feet in both
> worlds as an NCUC councilor and a member of Euralo's board, and I at
> least did not see any effort from the top to seriously canvass ALAC
> members opinions before arriving at a stance in our names. All I have
> seen on the ALAC lists and other lists like that of the Media Democracy
> Coalition has been messages to the effect that civil society people
> should work in the first instance through ALAC, not NCUC or NCSG. And
> yet the board has said it thinks at large structures should be active in
> the future NCSG, and we get criticized for somehow failing to include
> more ALS folks in our work, when of course from our side they're
> perfectly welcome and just don't choose to engage.
>
> Maybe I'm still a bit green (although after almost a year here this
> excuse is getting lame) but I simply fail to understand why people can't
> see that ALAC and NCUC/NCSG have different and non-competing functions
> and should be cross-pollinating and cooperating closely. Whatever stuff
> went on in the past between whomever just doesn't cut it as an excuse
> for continuing dysfunctionality today. Indeed, when we have tried to
> collaborate of late, as with the IRT, it has been clear that there's
> often quite a bit of overlap/harmony of view on substantive matters. So
> it's hard not to conclude that this is all about turf, personal empires,
> and interpersonal relations, which is just adolescent and nuts.
>
> In any event, once the board has given us the charter and we've decided
> how to respond, undertaking a serious NCUC/ALAC dialogue should be high
> on the list of priorities, in my view. It just doesn't work to have one
> group actively undermining the other when both could be working toward
> common objectives.
>
> Best,
>
> Bill
>
>
>
> ***********************************************************
> William J. Drake
> Senior Associate
> Centre for International Governance
> Graduate Institute of International and
> Development Studies
> Geneva, Switzerland
> william.drake at graduateinstitute.ch
> www.graduateinstitute.ch/cig/drake.html
> ***********************************************************
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