FW: [council] Prague - please read!

Evan Leibovitch evan at TELLY.ORG
Sun May 13 21:08:24 CEST 2012


As someone who's been involved with the ALAC's steadily improving
relationship with the GAC -- a relationship that was crucial in getting TLD
applicant support on the Board's agenda -- I will simply say that the GAC
operates ... differently. Different wavelengths, certainly. Challenging,
but not impossible, and they never said they couldn't work with us. We're
still working on it but finding the path very worthwhile.

Nonetheless, I wholeheartedly agree with Milton the the lack of proper
accommodation in policy making for anyone not directly involved in the
compact of buying and selling domains -- be it governments, non-registrant
end-users, law enforcement or others outside the compact -- is indeed "a
major structural flaw in ICANN's governance model".

The next GNSO review promises to be very interesting.

- Evan



On 13 May 2012 14:21, Milton L Mueller <mueller at syr.edu> wrote:

> > -----Original Message-----
> >
> > We've talked about this with the GAC before, and it mostly ended up with
> > them telling us about all the reasons why they can't really engage much
> > in joint working relationships with GNSO and prefer to deal with the
> > board.
>
> Yes, Bill is right. I am wondering how long it is going to take everyone
> involved to understand what I have been saying for years now: the GAC is a
> major structural flaw in ICANN's governance model.
>
> When the GAC says that they can't engage in joint working relationships
> with the GNSO, what they are really doing is creating a parallel, competing
> policy development entity that contends with GNSO in the offering of policy
> advice to the board. This is probably not deliberately destructive on the
> part of its members; it stems from their belief that it is inappropriate
> for governmental representatives to work in the bottom up, WG method used
> by the GNSO. It is also a reflection of their inability to work bottom up,
> as GAC members usually lack expertise on the issues and do not have the
> freedom to commit themselves to any compromises or positions without
> passing it up and down bureaucratic hierarchies.
>
> Whatever the motives, these contending policy advisors shatter the
> legitimacy and accountability of both GAC and GNSO, and undermine board
> accountability as well. There really is no defined policy making process,
> where balanced representation and "consensus" holds sway. There is, rather,
> a bunch of different entities tugging and pulling on the board's sleeves,
> trying to get its attention and sway their decision.
>
>
>


--
Evan Leibovitch
Toronto Canada

Em: evan at telly dot org
Sk: evanleibovitch
Tw: el56
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