-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 Hi all, I would like to propose the following message to the board. It's addressed to Bruce because we discussed this with him on the CCWG list. All you input on the mail or the two texts are very welcome, but I'd like to send the email soon. Dear Bruce, Hereby the Cross Community Working Party on ICANN's Corporate and Social Responsibility to Respect Human Rights would like to propose two suggestions for the Human Rights statement that the board is intending to make. One statement stays very close to the agreed bylaw language, and the other takes a more forward leaning position. We hope that these texts provide a useful input to your deliberations. Please let us know if you have any questions or suggestions or if we can be of any help. 1. The ICANN board commits to respecting human rights within ICANN's core values and mission. The Board will work together with the community to identify where ICANN's policies and operations can impact human rights and will seek to ensure that no human rights are adversely impacted. Furthermore, within its mission, ICANN will seek to review its processes for remediation to ensure that mechanisms are in place to redress if need be. 2. The board of ICANN commits to take concrete steps to operationalize its core value of respecting human rights withing ICANN's mission. The steps will include working together with the community to understand the potential human rights impacts of its operations through a human rights impact assessment, and engagement of the board, management, staff and stakeholders toward a common understanding of priority human rights issues, which would culminate in a human rights report, and putting in place a human rights remediation policy to address adverse human rights impacts. Best, Niels Niels ten Oever Head of Digital Article 19 www.article19.org PGP fingerprint 8D9F C567 BEE4 A431 56C4 678B 08B5 A0F2 636D 68E9 On 02/11/2016 12:42 PM, Tatiana Tropina wrote:
Hi Matt
Thanks
You were not on the call, but this is exactly was I was trying to point out on the call, about the possibility to go further than the bylaw language. The question was why do we need the board's statement then if it rephrases and repeats the language itself. I still think that it is not a problem if the board statement is worded closely to the bylaw language. Since the bylaw won't be operational, the board's commitment to respecting human rights and continuing the work with the community in the WS2 have more than a mere symbolic meaning. The statement will show the willingness to commit, to continue the work and to operationalise the bylaw.
My opinion: the simpler the better.
This is why I think we have to give two options: a simple option and "forward looking" option.
Best regards Tanya
On 11 February 2016 at 12:36, Matthew Shears <mshears@cdt.org <mailto:mshears@cdt.org>> wrote:
Wasn't on the call but Tatiana I think is pointing the right way. They are two different things. It seems to me that the commitment we need from the Board and perhaps the only one they might give at this stage until the FoI is undertaken is the commitment to the work in WS2. It would be a little unusual for them to go further than that given they were already skeptical of the bylaw. The second piece - ICANN's commitment to HR (not the Board's as it should be an organizational commitment) - would probably come as a result of the FoI.
On 11/02/2016 11:27, Tatiana Tropina via cc-humanrights3 wrote:
Dear Niels, dear all, after reading this short email exchange with Michele, I realised that may be we have to be clearer when we send the proposed wording of the statement to the board. I suggest inclusion of the explanation "what it means". Furthermore, after the call yesterday I am still not convinced that we can be sure that the board wants to go further than the language provided in the bylaw. I can suggest as an alternative solution that we send two proposed statements: (1) the one we discussed on the call and which is based on the bylaw (2) the statement on operationalisation and assessment that we drafted after the call. In this case, depending on what was the notion behind making this statement, the board can either chose one of them or draft a combination of two. What do you think? Cheers Tanya
On 10 February 2016 at 16:29, Niels ten Oever via cc-humanrights3 <<mailto:cc-humanrights3@icann.org>cc-humanrights3@icann.org <mailto:cc-humanrights3@icann.org>> wrote:
Hi Michele,
This statement means that the ICANN board will:
1. operationalize it's commitment to human rights 2. contribute to a Human Rights Impact Assessment with the community of stakeholders 3. contribute to the development of a Human Rights Policy with the community of stakeholders 4. work on a process for remediation.
Does this make it more clear? If not, can you make your question a bit more precise?
Best,
Niels
Niels ten Oever Head of Digital
Article 19 www.article19.org <http://www.article19.org>
PGP fingerprint 8D9F C567 BEE4 A431 56C4 678B 08B5 A0F2 636D 68E9
On 02/10/2016 04:24 PM, Michele Neylon - Blacknight wrote:
The board of ICANN commits to take concrete steps to
operationalize its core value of respecting human rights within ICANN's mission. The steps will include working together with the community to understand the potential human rights impacts of its operations through a human rights impact assessment, engagement of the board, management, staff and stakeholders toward a common understanding of priority human rights issues, and putting in place a human rights policy to address the priority issues. _______________________________________________ cc-humanrights3 mailing list cc-humanrights3@icann.org <mailto:cc-humanrights3@icann.org> https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights3
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