Hi all, For your information, please find the comments from Gabrielle attached. Would be great to see the comments from Stephanie as well. If we want to make this a product of the CCWP, it would be great to have a bit more people. Also happy to discuss this at our call on Friday. Best, Niels
Dear all Just wanted to say hello, rather late into this really interesting and productive conversation on this CCWP for ICANN. The thread was quite long and substantial so have had to take time to get up to speed; nothing like a long train-ride to enable that!. Being relatively new to ICANN at this level of work, it is quite encouraging to see how far this work has gone. I have not much to add in terms of the discussions around the title of the document, and also the symbolic and legally substantive issues around Human Rights as enshrined in international law and CSR. All the points raised are for a non-expert make sense. A couple of comments if I may though on the document as it is readied for circulation to the iCANN community; based on reading the penultimate draft but hopefully still relevant for the final tweaks, and future references. 1) The revised preamble/framing of this initiative for ICANN folk: this works pretty well now as long as there remains room for eventual inclusion of later human rights treaties and covenants that tend to drop off the list e.g. those on disability, the rights of women, rights of children etc. ICANN may want to, at this very early stage, restrict its thinking to privacy and freedom of expression, or focus on consumer rights at the expense of more inclusive human rights norms and keep stipulating this, particularly in terms of consumer rights and CSR frameworks. Nonetheless, revising this project in a way that continues to more inclusive is in the long term the right way to go even if there may be push-back: international human rights law and norms do not stop with the ICCPR and ICESCR, and norms change slowly over time as do legal instruments such as the UN Bill of Rights .... :) . a) So moving from there to the current introduction; where a clear distinction is made between protecting and respecting human rights. This makes sense so do make sure that the remaining references to 'protecting' human rights are redacted later in the document (e.g. page 18). b) That said and recalling point 1 above, the strong emphasis on how this initiative will only acknowledge"human rights content [that] is limited to internationally recognized human rights..." (page 8) strikes me as a bit too restrictive in that international recognition of the full range of human rights instruments that have been put in place since the UDHR varies across these treaties and covenants. This prominent place given to limitations and restrictions on which human rights instruments will be taken on board, even if for strategic purposes, This could in the future put this whole initiative on to the back foot as these "later" human rights instruments become relevant to ICANN's work. I am not a legal expert nor scholar of international human rights law but could this second limitation on page 8 perhaps be rephrased to accommodate just these nuances and in way that does not scare the horses (so to speak) but also does not shut the door for future developments. Not sure how to rephrase this but something like "human rights content refers specifically to recognized international human rights law and norms....." 2) The latter point affects what follows in the document and how different stakeholders will respond: So If I could just make one longer comment on the current text in light of comments related to the IRPC Charter. And, as some of you know, what comes next is from the point of view of the work of the IRP Coalition and its Charter of Human Rights and Principles of the Internet. This is mentioned, and referenced on page 12; It was suggested that the IRPC Charter does not have the requisite status because some of its Clauses "fall below international standards". The legal point - and ensuing debates - raised here notwithstanding (which Gabrielle provided for the IRPC Charter review at the 2014 IGF so they are well taken), I would like to note that seeing the IRPC Charter given its due place in the final draft confirms that these reservations need not preclude mention of the IRPC Charter in the context of this new opening for ICANN. This is because whatever the verdict on its content at present may be (Version 1.1) in the ICANN work the IRPC Charter is being rightly attributed its role as a foundational framework for thinking about human rights (broadly defined) within the more technically focused IG spaces - within and beyond ICANN. This is because it is arguably the first document that takes international law seriously as well as those more ethical though less legally rigorous positions advocated in civil society spaces i.e. the IRPC Charter links human rights (in toto) obligations for states to those articulated for corporations through CSR undertaking. For this reason alone it deserves this mention. What do I mean here? The critical points about some parts of the IRPC Charter referring to emerging rather than existing rights reach back to the earliest days of the IRPC Charter drafting process back in 2009; a period of starting out that saw discussions not unlike the ones we have had on this thread for the ICANN application of human rights in its work 5-6 years, and several UN resolutions etc, later. But even with these imperfections the IRPC Charter, in its own terms a "living document" (taking its cue from the UDHR) is a formative part of the ethical and legal landscape in which this ICANN-based initiative has emerged. So good to see that the IRPC Charter reference is still there though could I suggest the following revision of this paragraph on page 12 for accuracy: "Within the framework of the Internet Governance Forum, the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition was created in 2009 with the mission ÃÂÃÂto make rights on the Internet and their related duties, specified from the point of view of individual users, a central theme of the internet governance debate held in the IGF context". In 2010-11 the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition developed its Charter of Human Rights and Principles for the Internet, distilling its 21 clauses into 10 Rights and Principles for the Internet based on international human rights laws and norms.." 3) A minor editing point: Page 12, note 29 is incomplete so a minor edit could be "The IRPC Charter is available, in booklet form, in 8 languages, at http://internetrightsandprinciples.org/site/" 4) And on fiddly things like spelling and typos: Other edits too are needed to have consistent spelling (US or UK Spelling) and there are still some typos still need correcting. 5) On Stephanie's points about human rights scaring people; too true. So all the more reason for this initiative in ICANN to take courage; they scare not only the very states that are supposed to uphold them and in so doing protect their citizens, by law and in principle, but also powerful corporations, and ICANN is one, who too often fudge fundamental freedoms under CSR waffle or step back from "respecting" human rights in deed as well as words by appealing to the limits set on them by various sorts of national jurisdictions.. :) Will try and make the upcoming call tomorrow. Thanks Niels for all this great text-shepherding work. best wishes Marianne F On 27/05/2015 16:32, Niels ten Oever wrote:
Hi all,
For your information, please find the comments from Gabrielle attached. Would be great to see the comments from Stephanie as well.
If we want to make this a product of the CCWP, it would be great to have a bit more people.
Also happy to discuss this at our call on Friday.
Best,
Niels
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Marianne Franklin, PhD Professor of Global Media and Politics Convener: Global Media & Transnational Communications Program Goldsmiths (University of London) Department of Media & Communications New Cross, London SE14 6NW Tel: +44 20 7919 7072 <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> @GloComm https://twitter.com/GloComm http://www.gold.ac.uk/media-communications/staff/franklin/ https://www.gold.ac.uk/pg/ma-global-media-transnational-communications/ Chair of the Global Internet Governance Academic Network (GigaNet) Steering Committee/Former Co-Chair Internet Rights & Principles Coalition (UN IGF) www.internetrightsandprinciples.org @netrights
Dear Marianne and Stephanie, Thank You so much for all Your time spent for commenting on the draft - the comments are indeed very useful, and I am incorporating Your suggestions now. Thank You:) Let's talk in 20 mins, and decide how we proceed further! Best wishes, Monika On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 6:15 PM, Marianne Franklin <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> wrote:
Dear all
Just wanted to say hello, rather late into this really interesting and productive conversation on this CCWP for ICANN. The thread was quite long and substantial so have had to take time to get up to speed; nothing like a long train-ride to enable that!.
Being relatively new to ICANN at this level of work, it is quite encouraging to see how far this work has gone.
I have not much to add in terms of the discussions around the title of the document, and also the symbolic and legally substantive issues around Human Rights as enshrined in international law and CSR. All the points raised are for a non-expert make sense.
A couple of comments if I may though on the document as it is readied for circulation to the iCANN community; based on reading the penultimate draft but hopefully still relevant for the final tweaks, and future references.
1) The revised preamble/framing of this initiative for ICANN folk: this works pretty well now as long as there remains room for eventual inclusion of later human rights treaties and covenants that tend to drop off the list e.g. those on disability, the rights of women, rights of children etc. ICANN may want to, at this very early stage, restrict its thinking to privacy and freedom of expression, or focus on consumer rights at the expense of more inclusive human rights norms and keep stipulating this, particularly in terms of consumer rights and CSR frameworks. Nonetheless, revising this project in a way that continues to more inclusive is in the long term the right way to go even if there may be push-back: international human rights law and norms do not stop with the ICCPR and ICESCR, and norms change slowly over time as do legal instruments such as the UN Bill of Rights .... :) .
a) So moving from there to the current introduction; where a clear distinction is made between protecting and respecting human rights. This makes sense so do make sure that the remaining references to 'protecting' human rights are redacted later in the document (e.g. page 18).
b) That said and recalling point 1 above, the strong emphasis on how this initiative will only acknowledge"human rights content [that] is limited to internationally recognized human rights..." (page 8) strikes me as a bit too restrictive in that international recognition of the full range of human rights instruments that have been put in place since the UDHR varies across these treaties and covenants.
This prominent place given to limitations and restrictions on which human rights instruments will be taken on board, even if for strategic purposes, This could in the future put this whole initiative on to the back foot as these "later" human rights instruments become relevant to ICANN's work.
I am not a legal expert nor scholar of international human rights law but could this second limitation on page 8 perhaps be rephrased to accommodate just these nuances and in way that does not scare the horses (so to speak) but also does not shut the door for future developments. Not sure how to rephrase this but something like "human rights content refers specifically to recognized international human rights law and norms....."
2) The latter point affects what follows in the document and how different stakeholders will respond: So If I could just make one longer comment on the current text in light of comments related to the IRPC Charter. And, as some of you know, what comes next is from the point of view of the work of the IRP Coalition and its Charter of Human Rights and Principles of the Internet. This is mentioned, and referenced on page 12;
It was suggested that the IRPC Charter does not have the requisite status because some of its Clauses "fall below international standards". The legal point - and ensuing debates - raised here notwithstanding (which Gabrielle provided for the IRPC Charter review at the 2014 IGF so they are well taken), I would like to note that seeing the IRPC Charter given its due place in the final draft confirms that these reservations need not preclude mention of the IRPC Charter in the context of this new opening for ICANN.
This is because whatever the verdict on its content at present may be (Version 1.1) in the ICANN work the IRPC Charter is being rightly attributed its role as a foundational framework for thinking about human rights (broadly defined) within the more technically focused IG spaces - within and beyond ICANN. This is because it is arguably the first document that takes international law seriously as well as those more ethical though less legally rigorous positions advocated in civil society spaces i.e. the IRPC Charter links human rights (in toto) obligations for states to those articulated for corporations through CSR undertaking. For this reason alone it deserves this mention.
What do I mean here? The critical points about some parts of the IRPC Charter referring to emerging rather than existing rights reach back to the earliest days of the IRPC Charter drafting process back in 2009; a period of starting out that saw discussions not unlike the ones we have had on this thread for the ICANN application of human rights in its work 5-6 years, and several UN resolutions etc, later. But even with these imperfections the IRPC Charter, in its own terms a "living document" (taking its cue from the UDHR) is a formative part of the ethical and legal landscape in which this ICANN-based initiative has emerged.
So good to see that the IRPC Charter reference is still there though could I suggest the following revision of this paragraph on page 12 for accuracy:
"Within the framework of the Internet Governance Forum, the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition was created in 2009 with the mission “to make rights on the Internet and their related duties, specified from the point of view of individual users, a central theme of the internet governance debate held in the IGF context". In 2010-11 the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition developed its Charter of Human Rights and Principles for the Internet, distilling its 21 clauses into 10 Rights and Principles for the Internet based on international human rights laws and norms.."
3) A minor editing point: Page 12, note 29 is incomplete so a minor edit could be "The IRPC Charter is available, in booklet form, in 8 languages, at http://internetrightsandprinciples.org/site/"
4) And on fiddly things like spelling and typos: Other edits too are needed to have consistent spelling (US or UK Spelling) and there are still some typos still need correcting.
5) On Stephanie's points about human rights scaring people; too true. So all the more reason for this initiative in ICANN to take courage; they scare not only the very states that are supposed to uphold them and in so doing protect their citizens, by law and in principle, but also powerful corporations, and ICANN is one, who too often fudge fundamental freedoms under CSR waffle or step back from "respecting" human rights in deed as well as words by appealing to the limits set on them by various sorts of national jurisdictions.. :)
Will try and make the upcoming call tomorrow. Thanks Niels for all this great text-shepherding work.
best wishes Marianne F
On 27/05/2015 16:32, Niels ten Oever wrote:
Hi all,
For your information, please find the comments from Gabrielle attached. Would be great to see the comments from Stephanie as well.
If we want to make this a product of the CCWP, it would be great to have a bit more people.
Also happy to discuss this at our call on Friday.
Best,
Niels
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing listcc-humanrights@icann.orghttps://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Marianne Franklin, PhD Professor of Global Media and Politics Convener: Global Media & Transnational Communications Program Goldsmiths (University of London) Department of Media & Communications New Cross, London SE14 6NW Tel: +44 20 7919 7072<m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> @GloCommhttps://twitter.com/GloCommhttp://www.gold.ac.uk/media-communications/staff/... Chair of the Global Internet Governance Academic Network (GigaNet) Steering Committee/Former Co-Chair Internet Rights & Principles Coalition (UN IGF)www.internetrightsandprinciples.org @netrights
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Dr. Monika Zalnieriute Centre for Internet & Human Rights European University Viadrina Mittelweg 50, 12053 Berlin, Germany e-mail: monika.zalnieriute@eui.eu https://cihr.eu
Dear All, Would it be fine if I address Marianne's and Gabrielle's comments into the document first, and then we give to Stephanie for grammatical edits she promised in an earlier e-mail? Let me know as we dont want to have several parellell versions at the same time, Best wishes, Monika On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 6:15 PM, Marianne Franklin <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> wrote:
Dear all
Just wanted to say hello, rather late into this really interesting and productive conversation on this CCWP for ICANN. The thread was quite long and substantial so have had to take time to get up to speed; nothing like a long train-ride to enable that!.
Being relatively new to ICANN at this level of work, it is quite encouraging to see how far this work has gone.
I have not much to add in terms of the discussions around the title of the document, and also the symbolic and legally substantive issues around Human Rights as enshrined in international law and CSR. All the points raised are for a non-expert make sense.
A couple of comments if I may though on the document as it is readied for circulation to the iCANN community; based on reading the penultimate draft but hopefully still relevant for the final tweaks, and future references.
1) The revised preamble/framing of this initiative for ICANN folk: this works pretty well now as long as there remains room for eventual inclusion of later human rights treaties and covenants that tend to drop off the list e.g. those on disability, the rights of women, rights of children etc. ICANN may want to, at this very early stage, restrict its thinking to privacy and freedom of expression, or focus on consumer rights at the expense of more inclusive human rights norms and keep stipulating this, particularly in terms of consumer rights and CSR frameworks. Nonetheless, revising this project in a way that continues to more inclusive is in the long term the right way to go even if there may be push-back: international human rights law and norms do not stop with the ICCPR and ICESCR, and norms change slowly over time as do legal instruments such as the UN Bill of Rights .... :) .
a) So moving from there to the current introduction; where a clear distinction is made between protecting and respecting human rights. This makes sense so do make sure that the remaining references to 'protecting' human rights are redacted later in the document (e.g. page 18).
b) That said and recalling point 1 above, the strong emphasis on how this initiative will only acknowledge"human rights content [that] is limited to internationally recognized human rights..." (page 8) strikes me as a bit too restrictive in that international recognition of the full range of human rights instruments that have been put in place since the UDHR varies across these treaties and covenants.
This prominent place given to limitations and restrictions on which human rights instruments will be taken on board, even if for strategic purposes, This could in the future put this whole initiative on to the back foot as these "later" human rights instruments become relevant to ICANN's work.
I am not a legal expert nor scholar of international human rights law but could this second limitation on page 8 perhaps be rephrased to accommodate just these nuances and in way that does not scare the horses (so to speak) but also does not shut the door for future developments. Not sure how to rephrase this but something like "human rights content refers specifically to recognized international human rights law and norms....."
2) The latter point affects what follows in the document and how different stakeholders will respond: So If I could just make one longer comment on the current text in light of comments related to the IRPC Charter. And, as some of you know, what comes next is from the point of view of the work of the IRP Coalition and its Charter of Human Rights and Principles of the Internet. This is mentioned, and referenced on page 12;
It was suggested that the IRPC Charter does not have the requisite status because some of its Clauses "fall below international standards". The legal point - and ensuing debates - raised here notwithstanding (which Gabrielle provided for the IRPC Charter review at the 2014 IGF so they are well taken), I would like to note that seeing the IRPC Charter given its due place in the final draft confirms that these reservations need not preclude mention of the IRPC Charter in the context of this new opening for ICANN.
This is because whatever the verdict on its content at present may be (Version 1.1) in the ICANN work the IRPC Charter is being rightly attributed its role as a foundational framework for thinking about human rights (broadly defined) within the more technically focused IG spaces - within and beyond ICANN. This is because it is arguably the first document that takes international law seriously as well as those more ethical though less legally rigorous positions advocated in civil society spaces i.e. the IRPC Charter links human rights (in toto) obligations for states to those articulated for corporations through CSR undertaking. For this reason alone it deserves this mention.
What do I mean here? The critical points about some parts of the IRPC Charter referring to emerging rather than existing rights reach back to the earliest days of the IRPC Charter drafting process back in 2009; a period of starting out that saw discussions not unlike the ones we have had on this thread for the ICANN application of human rights in its work 5-6 years, and several UN resolutions etc, later. But even with these imperfections the IRPC Charter, in its own terms a "living document" (taking its cue from the UDHR) is a formative part of the ethical and legal landscape in which this ICANN-based initiative has emerged.
So good to see that the IRPC Charter reference is still there though could I suggest the following revision of this paragraph on page 12 for accuracy:
"Within the framework of the Internet Governance Forum, the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition was created in 2009 with the mission “to make rights on the Internet and their related duties, specified from the point of view of individual users, a central theme of the internet governance debate held in the IGF context". In 2010-11 the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition developed its Charter of Human Rights and Principles for the Internet, distilling its 21 clauses into 10 Rights and Principles for the Internet based on international human rights laws and norms.."
3) A minor editing point: Page 12, note 29 is incomplete so a minor edit could be "The IRPC Charter is available, in booklet form, in 8 languages, at http://internetrightsandprinciples.org/site/"
4) And on fiddly things like spelling and typos: Other edits too are needed to have consistent spelling (US or UK Spelling) and there are still some typos still need correcting.
5) On Stephanie's points about human rights scaring people; too true. So all the more reason for this initiative in ICANN to take courage; they scare not only the very states that are supposed to uphold them and in so doing protect their citizens, by law and in principle, but also powerful corporations, and ICANN is one, who too often fudge fundamental freedoms under CSR waffle or step back from "respecting" human rights in deed as well as words by appealing to the limits set on them by various sorts of national jurisdictions.. :)
Will try and make the upcoming call tomorrow. Thanks Niels for all this great text-shepherding work.
best wishes Marianne F
On 27/05/2015 16:32, Niels ten Oever wrote:
Hi all,
For your information, please find the comments from Gabrielle attached. Would be great to see the comments from Stephanie as well.
If we want to make this a product of the CCWP, it would be great to have a bit more people.
Also happy to discuss this at our call on Friday.
Best,
Niels
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing listcc-humanrights@icann.orghttps://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Marianne Franklin, PhD Professor of Global Media and Politics Convener: Global Media & Transnational Communications Program Goldsmiths (University of London) Department of Media & Communications New Cross, London SE14 6NW Tel: +44 20 7919 7072<m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> @GloCommhttps://twitter.com/GloCommhttp://www.gold.ac.uk/media-communications/staff/... Chair of the Global Internet Governance Academic Network (GigaNet) Steering Committee/Former Co-Chair Internet Rights & Principles Coalition (UN IGF)www.internetrightsandprinciples.org @netrights
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Dr. Monika Zalnieriute Centre for Internet & Human Rights European University Viadrina Mittelweg 50, 12053 Berlin, Germany e-mail: monika.zalnieriute@eui.eu https://cihr.eu
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 Hi all, We don't need to address the grammatical errors, I have reserved time from an editor to go through the document to do that, so you don;t have to spend your valuable time on that. So Monika, it's indeed better if you focus on the comments made by Marianne and Gabrielle, and the issues that may come out of this call. 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 05/29/2015 02:46 PM, zalnieriute . wrote:
Dear All,
Would it be fine if I address Marianne's and Gabrielle's comments into the document first, and then we give to Stephanie for grammatical edits she promised in an earlier e-mail?
Let me know as we dont want to have several parellell versions at the same time,
Best wishes,
Monika
On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 6:15 PM, Marianne Franklin <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk <mailto:m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk>> wrote:
Dear all
Just wanted to say hello, rather late into this really interesting and productive conversation on this CCWP for ICANN. The thread was quite long and substantial so have had to take time to get up to speed; nothing like a long train-ride to enable that!.
Being relatively new to ICANN at this level of work, it is quite encouraging to see how far this work has gone.
I have not much to add in terms of the discussions around the title of the document, and also the symbolic and legally substantive issues around Human Rights as enshrined in international law and CSR. All the points raised are for a non-expert make sense.
A couple of comments if I may though on the document as it is readied for circulation to the iCANN community; based on reading the penultimate draft but hopefully still relevant for the final tweaks, and future references.
1) The revised preamble/framing of this initiative for ICANN folk: this works pretty well now as long as there remains room for eventual inclusion of later human rights treaties and covenants that tend to drop off the list e.g. those on disability, the rights of women, rights of children etc. ICANN may want to, at this very early stage, restrict its thinking to privacy and freedom of expression, or focus on consumer rights at the expense of more inclusive human rights norms and keep stipulating this, particularly in terms of consumer rights and CSR frameworks. Nonetheless, revising this project in a way that continues to more inclusive is in the long term the right way to go even if there may be push-back: international human rights law and norms do not stop with the ICCPR and ICESCR, and norms change slowly over time as do legal instruments such as the UN Bill of Rights .... :) .
a) So moving from there to the current introduction; where a clear distinction is made between protecting and respecting human rights. This makes sense so do make sure that the remaining references to 'protecting' human rights are redacted later in the document (e.g. page 18).
b) That said and recalling point 1 above, the strong emphasis on how this initiative will only acknowledge"human rights content [that] is limited to internationally recognized human rights..." (page 8) strikes me as a bit too restrictive in that international recognition of the full range of human rights instruments that have been put in place since the UDHR varies across these treaties and covenants.
This prominent place given to limitations and restrictions on which human rights instruments will be taken on board, even if for strategic purposes, This could in the future put this whole initiative on to the back foot as these "later" human rights instruments become relevant to ICANN's work.
I am not a legal expert nor scholar of international human rights law but could this second limitation on page 8 perhaps be rephrased to accommodate just these nuances and in way that does not scare the horses (so to speak) but also does not shut the door for future developments. Not sure how to rephrase this but something like "human rights content refers specifically to recognized international human rights law and norms....."
2) The latter point affects what follows in the document and how different stakeholders will respond: So If I could just make one longer comment on the current text in light of comments related to the IRPC Charter. And, as some of you know, what comes next is from the point of view of the work of the IRP Coalition and its Charter of Human Rights and Principles of the Internet. This is mentioned, and referenced on page 12;
It was suggested that the IRPC Charter does not have the requisite status because some of its Clauses "fall below international standards". The legal point - and ensuing debates - raised here notwithstanding (which Gabrielle provided for the IRPC Charter review at the 2014 IGF so they are well taken), I would like to note that seeing the IRPC Charter given its due place in the final draft confirms that these reservations need not preclude mention of the IRPC Charter in the context of this new opening for ICANN.
This is because whatever the verdict on its content at present may be (Version 1.1) in the ICANN work the IRPC Charter is being rightly attributed its role as a foundational framework for thinking about human rights (broadly defined) within the more technically focused IG spaces - within and beyond ICANN. This is because it is arguably the first document that takes international law seriously as well as those more ethical though less legally rigorous positions advocated in civil society spaces i.e. the IRPC Charter links human rights (in toto) obligations for states to those articulated for corporations through CSR undertaking. For this reason alone it deserves this mention.
What do I mean here? The critical points about some parts of the IRPC Charter referring to emerging rather than existing rights reach back to the earliest days of the IRPC Charter drafting process back in 2009; a period of starting out that saw discussions not unlike the ones we have had on this thread for the ICANN application of human rights in its work 5-6 years, and several UN resolutions etc, later. But even with these imperfections the IRPC Charter, in its own terms a "living document" (taking its cue from the UDHR) is a formative part of the ethical and legal landscape in which this ICANN-based initiative has emerged.
So good to see that the IRPC Charter reference is still there though could I suggest the following revision of this paragraph on page 12 for accuracy:
"Within the framework of the Internet Governance Forum, the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition was created in 2009 with the mission “to make rights on the Internet and their related duties, specified from the point of view of individual users, a central theme of the internet governance debate held in the IGF context". In 2010-11 the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition developed its Charter of Human Rights and Principles for the Internet, distilling its 21 clauses into 10 Rights and Principles for the Internet based on international human rights laws and norms.."
3) A minor editing point: Page 12, note 29 is incomplete so a minor edit could be "The IRPC Charter is available, in booklet form, in 8 languages, at http://internetrightsandprinciples.org/site/"
4) And on fiddly things like spelling and typos: Other edits too are needed to have consistent spelling (US or UK Spelling) and there are still some typos still need correcting.
5) On Stephanie's points about human rights scaring people; too true. So all the more reason for this initiative in ICANN to take courage; they scare not only the very states that are supposed to uphold them and in so doing protect their citizens, by law and in principle, but also powerful corporations, and ICANN is one, who too often fudge fundamental freedoms under CSR waffle or step back from "respecting" human rights in deed as well as words by appealing to the limits set on them by various sorts of national jurisdictions.. :)
Will try and make the upcoming call tomorrow. Thanks Niels for all this great text-shepherding work.
best wishes Marianne F
On 27/05/2015 16:32, Niels ten Oever wrote:
Hi all,
For your information, please find the comments from Gabrielle attached. Would be great to see the comments from Stephanie as well.
If we want to make this a product of the CCWP, it would be great to have a bit more people.
Also happy to discuss this at our call on Friday.
Best,
Niels
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org <mailto:cc-humanrights@icann.org> https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Marianne Franklin, PhD Professor of Global Media and Politics Convener: Global Media & Transnational Communications Program Goldsmiths (University of London) Department of Media & Communications New Cross, London SE14 6NW Tel: +44 20 7919 7072 <tel:%2B44%2020%207919%207072> <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> <mailto:m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> @GloComm https://twitter.com/GloComm http://www.gold.ac.uk/media-communications/staff/franklin/ https://www.gold.ac.uk/pg/ma-global-media-transnational-communications /
Chair of the Global Internet Governance Academic Network (GigaNet)
Steering Committee/Former Co-Chair Internet Rights & Principles Coalition (UN IGF) www.internetrightsandprinciples.org <http://www.internetrightsandprinciples.org> @netrights
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org <mailto:cc-humanrights@icann.org> https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Dr. Monika Zalnieriute Centre for Internet & Human Rights European University Viadrina Mittelweg 50, 12053 Berlin, Germany e-mail: monika.zalnieriute@eui.eu <mailto:monika.zalnieriute@eui.eu> https://cihr.eu <https://cihr.eu/>
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
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`Dear all Fine with me this approach. Am dialling up shortly best MF On 29/05/2015 14:53, Niels ten Oever wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256
Hi all,
We don't need to address the grammatical errors, I have reserved time from an editor to go through the document to do that, so you don;t have to spend your valuable time on that.
So Monika, it's indeed better if you focus on the comments made by Marianne and Gabrielle, and the issues that may come out of this call.
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 05/29/2015 02:46 PM, zalnieriute . wrote:
Dear All,
Would it be fine if I address Marianne's and Gabrielle's comments into the document first, and then we give to Stephanie for grammatical edits she promised in an earlier e-mail?
Let me know as we dont want to have several parellell versions at the same time,
Best wishes,
Monika
On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 6:15 PM, Marianne Franklin <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk <mailto:m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk>> wrote:
Dear all
Just wanted to say hello, rather late into this really interesting and productive conversation on this CCWP for ICANN. The thread was quite long and substantial so have had to take time to get up to speed; nothing like a long train-ride to enable that!.
Being relatively new to ICANN at this level of work, it is quite encouraging to see how far this work has gone.
I have not much to add in terms of the discussions around the title of the document, and also the symbolic and legally substantive issues around Human Rights as enshrined in international law and CSR. All the points raised are for a non-expert make sense.
A couple of comments if I may though on the document as it is readied for circulation to the iCANN community; based on reading the penultimate draft but hopefully still relevant for the final tweaks, and future references.
1) The revised preamble/framing of this initiative for ICANN folk: this works pretty well now as long as there remains room for eventual inclusion of later human rights treaties and covenants that tend to drop off the list e.g. those on disability, the rights of women, rights of children etc. ICANN may want to, at this very early stage, restrict its thinking to privacy and freedom of expression, or focus on consumer rights at the expense of more inclusive human rights norms and keep stipulating this, particularly in terms of consumer rights and CSR frameworks. Nonetheless, revising this project in a way that continues to more inclusive is in the long term the right way to go even if there may be push-back: international human rights law and norms do not stop with the ICCPR and ICESCR, and norms change slowly over time as do legal instruments such as the UN Bill of Rights .... :) .
a) So moving from there to the current introduction; where a clear distinction is made between protecting and respecting human rights. This makes sense so do make sure that the remaining references to 'protecting' human rights are redacted later in the document (e.g. page 18).
b) That said and recalling point 1 above, the strong emphasis on how this initiative will only acknowledge"human rights content [that] is limited to internationally recognized human rights..." (page 8) strikes me as a bit too restrictive in that international recognition of the full range of human rights instruments that have been put in place since the UDHR varies across these treaties and covenants.
This prominent place given to limitations and restrictions on which human rights instruments will be taken on board, even if for strategic purposes, This could in the future put this whole initiative on to the back foot as these "later" human rights instruments become relevant to ICANN's work.
I am not a legal expert nor scholar of international human rights law but could this second limitation on page 8 perhaps be rephrased to accommodate just these nuances and in way that does not scare the horses (so to speak) but also does not shut the door for future developments. Not sure how to rephrase this but something like "human rights content refers specifically to recognized international human rights law and norms....."
2) The latter point affects what follows in the document and how different stakeholders will respond: So If I could just make one longer comment on the current text in light of comments related to the IRPC Charter. And, as some of you know, what comes next is from the point of view of the work of the IRP Coalition and its Charter of Human Rights and Principles of the Internet. This is mentioned, and referenced on page 12;
It was suggested that the IRPC Charter does not have the requisite status because some of its Clauses "fall below international standards". The legal point - and ensuing debates - raised here notwithstanding (which Gabrielle provided for the IRPC Charter review at the 2014 IGF so they are well taken), I would like to note that seeing the IRPC Charter given its due place in the final draft confirms that these reservations need not preclude mention of the IRPC Charter in the context of this new opening for ICANN.
This is because whatever the verdict on its content at present may be (Version 1.1) in the ICANN work the IRPC Charter is being rightly attributed its role as a foundational framework for thinking about human rights (broadly defined) within the more technically focused IG spaces - within and beyond ICANN. This is because it is arguably the first document that takes international law seriously as well as those more ethical though less legally rigorous positions advocated in civil society spaces i.e. the IRPC Charter links human rights (in toto) obligations for states to those articulated for corporations through CSR undertaking. For this reason alone it deserves this mention.
What do I mean here? The critical points about some parts of the IRPC Charter referring to emerging rather than existing rights reach back to the earliest days of the IRPC Charter drafting process back in 2009; a period of starting out that saw discussions not unlike the ones we have had on this thread for the ICANN application of human rights in its work 5-6 years, and several UN resolutions etc, later. But even with these imperfections the IRPC Charter, in its own terms a "living document" (taking its cue from the UDHR) is a formative part of the ethical and legal landscape in which this ICANN-based initiative has emerged.
So good to see that the IRPC Charter reference is still there though could I suggest the following revision of this paragraph on page 12 for accuracy:
"Within the framework of the Internet Governance Forum, the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition was created in 2009 with the mission “to make rights on the Internet and their related duties, specified from the point of view of individual users, a central theme of the internet governance debate held in the IGF context". In 2010-11 the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition developed its Charter of Human Rights and Principles for the Internet, distilling its 21 clauses into 10 Rights and Principles for the Internet based on international human rights laws and norms.."
3) A minor editing point: Page 12, note 29 is incomplete so a minor edit could be "The IRPC Charter is available, in booklet form, in 8 languages, at http://internetrightsandprinciples.org/site/"
4) And on fiddly things like spelling and typos: Other edits too are needed to have consistent spelling (US or UK Spelling) and there are still some typos still need correcting.
5) On Stephanie's points about human rights scaring people; too true. So all the more reason for this initiative in ICANN to take courage; they scare not only the very states that are supposed to uphold them and in so doing protect their citizens, by law and in principle, but also powerful corporations, and ICANN is one, who too often fudge fundamental freedoms under CSR waffle or step back from "respecting" human rights in deed as well as words by appealing to the limits set on them by various sorts of national jurisdictions.. :)
Will try and make the upcoming call tomorrow. Thanks Niels for all this great text-shepherding work.
best wishes Marianne F
On 27/05/2015 16:32, Niels ten Oever wrote:
Hi all,
For your information, please find the comments from Gabrielle attached. Would be great to see the comments from Stephanie as well.
If we want to make this a product of the CCWP, it would be great to have a bit more people.
Also happy to discuss this at our call on Friday.
Best,
Niels
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org <mailto:cc-humanrights@icann.org> https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights -- Marianne Franklin, PhD Professor of Global Media and Politics Convener: Global Media & Transnational Communications Program Goldsmiths (University of London) Department of Media & Communications New Cross, London SE14 6NW Tel: +44 20 7919 7072 <tel:%2B44%2020%207919%207072> <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> <mailto:m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> @GloComm https://twitter.com/GloComm http://www.gold.ac.uk/media-communications/staff/franklin/ https://www.gold.ac.uk/pg/ma-global-media-transnational-communications /
Chair of the Global Internet Governance Academic Network (GigaNet)
Steering Committee/Former Co-Chair Internet Rights & Principles Coalition (UN IGF) www.internetrightsandprinciples.org <http://www.internetrightsandprinciples.org> @netrights
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org <mailto:cc-humanrights@icann.org> https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Dr. Monika Zalnieriute Centre for Internet & Human Rights European University Viadrina Mittelweg 50, 12053 Berlin, Germany e-mail: monika.zalnieriute@eui.eu <mailto:monika.zalnieriute@eui.eu> https://cihr.eu <https://cihr.eu/>
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2
iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJVaGFKAAoJEAi1oPJjbWjprzwH+QHY1CVX31X8TvPfItkQjayH ChGvOAArqTUhZEJRrCX3qoFTV2XADtkHqNb1Z0e7sT3nmh86qgGg774NFB0TNLx6 sfNOjSFbPMAlh/sgK22XXelT6htsjNg/1LqVXZddrmvKG57fmYz3xxpORYCCqbWe Nhj0bW9H1XD1D3rscdnfXcxsy0OkoJsBw08RxPpw9n4nwV/rhdZerG0xh27jJI2W 9iyIB1DAQr6ZZNoF8UY1nbHN0/ClK6HpMjTHeNWRK3892Xe2hX0hKG1sUNG31Kzj +77sALijzlzYttIkeDULeR7iaWWRsFKr9tV/6u1zmCIb2vdvuks5JLVYnBmvQU4= =LTCT -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Marianne Franklin, PhD Professor of Global Media and Politics Convener: Global Media & Transnational Communications Program Goldsmiths (University of London) Department of Media & Communications New Cross, London SE14 6NW Tel: +44 20 7919 7072 <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> @GloComm https://twitter.com/GloComm http://www.gold.ac.uk/media-communications/staff/franklin/ https://www.gold.ac.uk/pg/ma-global-media-transnational-communications/ Chair of the Global Internet Governance Academic Network (GigaNet) Steering Committee/Former Co-Chair Internet Rights & Principles Coalition (UN IGF) www.internetrightsandprinciples.org @netrights
My apologies for missing the call, I had an unexpected event here. I would be happy to help with final edits, as I expect there were more revisions suggested on the call. I am ccing Kathy as I am not sure whether you have added her to the list as yet. Kind regards, Stephanie P On 2015-05-29 8:46, zalnieriute . wrote:
Dear All,
Would it be fine if I address Marianne's and Gabrielle's comments into the document first, and then we give to Stephanie for grammatical edits she promised in an earlier e-mail?
Let me know as we dont want to have several parellell versions at the same time,
Best wishes,
Monika
On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 6:15 PM, Marianne Franklin <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk <mailto:m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk>> wrote:
Dear all
Just wanted to say hello, rather late into this really interesting and productive conversation on this CCWP for ICANN. The thread was quite long and substantial so have had to take time to get up to speed; nothing like a long train-ride to enable that!.
Being relatively new to ICANN at this level of work, it is quite encouraging to see how far this work has gone.
I have not much to add in terms of the discussions around the title of the document, and also the symbolic and legally substantive issues around Human Rights as enshrined in international law and CSR. All the points raised are for a non-expert make sense.
A couple of comments if I may though on the document as it is readied for circulation to the iCANN community; based on reading the penultimate draft but hopefully still relevant for the final tweaks, and future references.
1) The revised preamble/framing of this initiative for ICANN folk: this works pretty well now as long as there remains room for eventual inclusion of later human rights treaties and covenants that tend to drop off the list e.g. those on disability, the rights of women, rights of children etc. ICANN may want to, at this very early stage, restrict its thinking to privacy and freedom of expression, or focus on consumer rights at the expense of more inclusive human rights norms and keep stipulating this, particularly in terms of consumer rights and CSR frameworks. Nonetheless, revising this project in a way that continues to more inclusive is in the long term the right way to go even if there may be push-back: international human rights law and norms do not stop with the ICCPR and ICESCR, and norms change slowly over time as do legal instruments such as the UN Bill of Rights .... :) .
a) So moving from there to the current introduction; where a clear distinction is made between protecting and respecting human rights. This makes sense so do make sure that the remaining references to 'protecting' human rights are redacted later in the document (e.g. page 18).
b) That said and recalling point 1 above, the strong emphasis on how this initiative will only acknowledge"human rights content [that] is limited to internationally recognized human rights..." (page 8) strikes me as a bit too restrictive in that international recognition of the full range of human rights instruments that have been put in place since the UDHR varies across these treaties and covenants.
This prominent place given to limitations and restrictions on which human rights instruments will be taken on board, even if for strategic purposes, This could in the future put this whole initiative on to the back foot as these "later" human rights instruments become relevant to ICANN's work.
I am not a legal expert nor scholar of international human rights law but could this second limitation on page 8 perhaps be rephrased to accommodate just these nuances and in way that does not scare the horses (so to speak) but also does not shut the door for future developments. Not sure how to rephrase this but something like "human rights content refers specifically to recognized international human rights law and norms....."
2) The latter point affects what follows in the document and how different stakeholders will respond: So If I could just make one longer comment on the current text in light of comments related to the IRPC Charter. And, as some of you know, what comes next is from the point of view of the work of the IRP Coalition and its Charter of Human Rights and Principles of the Internet. This is mentioned, and referenced on page 12;
It was suggested that the IRPC Charter does not have the requisite status because some of its Clauses "fall below international standards". The legal point - and ensuing debates - raised here notwithstanding (which Gabrielle provided for the IRPC Charter review at the 2014 IGF so they are well taken), I would like to note that seeing the IRPC Charter given its due place in the final draft confirms that these reservations need not preclude mention of the IRPC Charter in the context of this new opening for ICANN.
This is because whatever the verdict on its content at present may be (Version 1.1) in the ICANN work the IRPC Charter is being rightly attributed its role as a foundational framework for thinking about human rights (broadly defined) within the more technically focused IG spaces - within and beyond ICANN. This is because it is arguably the first document that takes international law seriously as well as those more ethical though less legally rigorous positions advocated in civil society spaces i.e. the IRPC Charter links human rights (in toto) obligations for states to those articulated for corporations through CSR undertaking. For this reason alone it deserves this mention.
What do I mean here? The critical points about some parts of the IRPC Charter referring to emerging rather than existing rights reach back to the earliest days of the IRPC Charter drafting process back in 2009; a period of starting out that saw discussions not unlike the ones we have had on this thread for the ICANN application of human rights in its work 5-6 years, and several UN resolutions etc, later. But even with these imperfections the IRPC Charter, in its own terms a "living document" (taking its cue from the UDHR) is a formative part of the ethical and legal landscape in which this ICANN-based initiative has emerged.
So good to see that the IRPC Charter reference is still there though could I suggest the following revision of this paragraph on page 12 for accuracy:
"Within the framework of the Internet Governance Forum, the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition was created in 2009 with the mission “to make rights on the Internet and their related duties, specified from the point of view of individual users, a central theme of the internet governance debate held in the IGF context". In 2010-11 the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition developed its Charter of Human Rights and Principles for the Internet, distilling its 21 clauses into 10 Rights and Principles for the Internet based on international human rights laws and norms.."
3) A minor editing point: Page 12, note 29 is incomplete so a minor edit could be "The IRPC Charter is available, in booklet form, in 8 languages, at http://internetrightsandprinciples.org/site/"
4) And on fiddly things like spelling and typos: Other edits too are needed to have consistent spelling (US or UK Spelling) and there are still some typos still need correcting.
5) On Stephanie's points about human rights scaring people; too true. So all the more reason for this initiative in ICANN to take courage; they scare not only the very states that are supposed to uphold them and in so doing protect their citizens, by law and in principle, but also powerful corporations, and ICANN is one, who too often fudge fundamental freedoms under CSR waffle or step back from "respecting" human rights in deed as well as words by appealing to the limits set on them by various sorts of national jurisdictions.. :)
Will try and make the upcoming call tomorrow. Thanks Niels for all this great text-shepherding work.
best wishes Marianne F
On 27/05/2015 16:32, Niels ten Oever wrote:
Hi all,
For your information, please find the comments from Gabrielle attached. Would be great to see the comments from Stephanie as well.
If we want to make this a product of the CCWP, it would be great to have a bit more people.
Also happy to discuss this at our call on Friday.
Best,
Niels
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org <mailto:cc-humanrights@icann.org> https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Marianne Franklin, PhD Professor of Global Media and Politics Convener: Global Media & Transnational Communications Program Goldsmiths (University of London) Department of Media & Communications New Cross, London SE14 6NW Tel:+44 20 7919 7072 <tel:%2B44%2020%207919%207072> <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> <mailto:m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> @GloComm https://twitter.com/GloComm http://www.gold.ac.uk/media-communications/staff/franklin/ https://www.gold.ac.uk/pg/ma-global-media-transnational-communications/ Chair of the Global Internet Governance Academic Network (GigaNet) Steering Committee/Former Co-Chair Internet Rights & Principles Coalition (UN IGF) www.internetrightsandprinciples.org <http://www.internetrightsandprinciples.org> @netrights
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org <mailto:cc-humanrights@icann.org> https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Dr. Monika Zalnieriute Centre for Internet & Human Rights European University Viadrina Mittelweg 50, 12053 Berlin, Germany e-mail: monika.zalnieriute@eui.eu <mailto:monika.zalnieriute@eui.eu> https://cihr.eu <https://cihr.eu/>
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
Dear Monika and all, I went through the report and added a few more comments (up to section 3). I like very much the the angle of the analysis and the suggestions that were made. I believe that more work needs to be done in order to connect these suggestions with the day to day of ICANN's procedures and policy development. I also feel that a mapping of concrete cases in which human rights were at stake (or will likely be at stake in the near future) would help to make the case for some of the mechanisms and bodies that are being proposed (some of them will generate expenditures that will need to be justified on very concrete terms). Maybe this is a not something to be tackled by this particular report, but it would be good to keep that in mind. I think that the meeting in BA would be an excellent opportunity to present this report, maybe as a draft report, and find the expertise necessary to complete the analysis with an in depth look at ICANN's procedures and policy development process. Best wishes, Marília On Fri, May 29, 2015 at 9:46 AM, zalnieriute . <zalnieriute@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear All,
Would it be fine if I address Marianne's and Gabrielle's comments into the document first, and then we give to Stephanie for grammatical edits she promised in an earlier e-mail?
Let me know as we dont want to have several parellell versions at the same time,
Best wishes,
Monika
On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 6:15 PM, Marianne Franklin < m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> wrote:
Dear all
Just wanted to say hello, rather late into this really interesting and productive conversation on this CCWP for ICANN. The thread was quite long and substantial so have had to take time to get up to speed; nothing like a long train-ride to enable that!.
Being relatively new to ICANN at this level of work, it is quite encouraging to see how far this work has gone.
I have not much to add in terms of the discussions around the title of the document, and also the symbolic and legally substantive issues around Human Rights as enshrined in international law and CSR. All the points raised are for a non-expert make sense.
A couple of comments if I may though on the document as it is readied for circulation to the iCANN community; based on reading the penultimate draft but hopefully still relevant for the final tweaks, and future references.
1) The revised preamble/framing of this initiative for ICANN folk: this works pretty well now as long as there remains room for eventual inclusion of later human rights treaties and covenants that tend to drop off the list e.g. those on disability, the rights of women, rights of children etc. ICANN may want to, at this very early stage, restrict its thinking to privacy and freedom of expression, or focus on consumer rights at the expense of more inclusive human rights norms and keep stipulating this, particularly in terms of consumer rights and CSR frameworks. Nonetheless, revising this project in a way that continues to more inclusive is in the long term the right way to go even if there may be push-back: international human rights law and norms do not stop with the ICCPR and ICESCR, and norms change slowly over time as do legal instruments such as the UN Bill of Rights .... :) .
a) So moving from there to the current introduction; where a clear distinction is made between protecting and respecting human rights. This makes sense so do make sure that the remaining references to 'protecting' human rights are redacted later in the document (e.g. page 18).
b) That said and recalling point 1 above, the strong emphasis on how this initiative will only acknowledge"human rights content [that] is limited to internationally recognized human rights..." (page 8) strikes me as a bit too restrictive in that international recognition of the full range of human rights instruments that have been put in place since the UDHR varies across these treaties and covenants.
This prominent place given to limitations and restrictions on which human rights instruments will be taken on board, even if for strategic purposes, This could in the future put this whole initiative on to the back foot as these "later" human rights instruments become relevant to ICANN's work.
I am not a legal expert nor scholar of international human rights law but could this second limitation on page 8 perhaps be rephrased to accommodate just these nuances and in way that does not scare the horses (so to speak) but also does not shut the door for future developments. Not sure how to rephrase this but something like "human rights content refers specifically to recognized international human rights law and norms....."
2) The latter point affects what follows in the document and how different stakeholders will respond: So If I could just make one longer comment on the current text in light of comments related to the IRPC Charter. And, as some of you know, what comes next is from the point of view of the work of the IRP Coalition and its Charter of Human Rights and Principles of the Internet. This is mentioned, and referenced on page 12;
It was suggested that the IRPC Charter does not have the requisite status because some of its Clauses "fall below international standards". The legal point - and ensuing debates - raised here notwithstanding (which Gabrielle provided for the IRPC Charter review at the 2014 IGF so they are well taken), I would like to note that seeing the IRPC Charter given its due place in the final draft confirms that these reservations need not preclude mention of the IRPC Charter in the context of this new opening for ICANN.
This is because whatever the verdict on its content at present may be (Version 1.1) in the ICANN work the IRPC Charter is being rightly attributed its role as a foundational framework for thinking about human rights (broadly defined) within the more technically focused IG spaces - within and beyond ICANN. This is because it is arguably the first document that takes international law seriously as well as those more ethical though less legally rigorous positions advocated in civil society spaces i.e. the IRPC Charter links human rights (in toto) obligations for states to those articulated for corporations through CSR undertaking. For this reason alone it deserves this mention.
What do I mean here? The critical points about some parts of the IRPC Charter referring to emerging rather than existing rights reach back to the earliest days of the IRPC Charter drafting process back in 2009; a period of starting out that saw discussions not unlike the ones we have had on this thread for the ICANN application of human rights in its work 5-6 years, and several UN resolutions etc, later. But even with these imperfections the IRPC Charter, in its own terms a "living document" (taking its cue from the UDHR) is a formative part of the ethical and legal landscape in which this ICANN-based initiative has emerged.
So good to see that the IRPC Charter reference is still there though could I suggest the following revision of this paragraph on page 12 for accuracy:
"Within the framework of the Internet Governance Forum, the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition was created in 2009 with the mission “to make rights on the Internet and their related duties, specified from the point of view of individual users, a central theme of the internet governance debate held in the IGF context". In 2010-11 the Internet Rights & Principles Coalition developed its Charter of Human Rights and Principles for the Internet, distilling its 21 clauses into 10 Rights and Principles for the Internet based on international human rights laws and norms.."
3) A minor editing point: Page 12, note 29 is incomplete so a minor edit could be "The IRPC Charter is available, in booklet form, in 8 languages, at http://internetrightsandprinciples.org/site/"
4) And on fiddly things like spelling and typos: Other edits too are needed to have consistent spelling (US or UK Spelling) and there are still some typos still need correcting.
5) On Stephanie's points about human rights scaring people; too true. So all the more reason for this initiative in ICANN to take courage; they scare not only the very states that are supposed to uphold them and in so doing protect their citizens, by law and in principle, but also powerful corporations, and ICANN is one, who too often fudge fundamental freedoms under CSR waffle or step back from "respecting" human rights in deed as well as words by appealing to the limits set on them by various sorts of national jurisdictions.. :)
Will try and make the upcoming call tomorrow. Thanks Niels for all this great text-shepherding work.
best wishes Marianne F
On 27/05/2015 16:32, Niels ten Oever wrote:
Hi all,
For your information, please find the comments from Gabrielle attached. Would be great to see the comments from Stephanie as well.
If we want to make this a product of the CCWP, it would be great to have a bit more people.
Also happy to discuss this at our call on Friday.
Best,
Niels
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing listcc-humanrights@icann.orghttps://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Marianne Franklin, PhD Professor of Global Media and Politics Convener: Global Media & Transnational Communications Program Goldsmiths (University of London) Department of Media & Communications New Cross, London SE14 6NW Tel: +44 20 7919 7072<m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> <m.i.franklin@gold.ac.uk> @GloCommhttps://twitter.com/GloCommhttp://www.gold.ac.uk/media-communications/staff/... Chair of the Global Internet Governance Academic Network (GigaNet) Steering Committee/Former Co-Chair Internet Rights & Principles Coalition (UN IGF)www.internetrightsandprinciples.org @netrights
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- Dr. Monika Zalnieriute Centre for Internet & Human Rights European University Viadrina Mittelweg 50, 12053 Berlin, Germany e-mail: monika.zalnieriute@eui.eu https://cihr.eu
_______________________________________________ cc-humanrights mailing list cc-humanrights@icann.org https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-humanrights
-- *Marília Maciel* Pesquisadora Gestora - Centro de Tecnologia e Sociedade - FGV Direito Rio Researcher and Coordinator - Center for Technology & Society - FGV Law School http://direitorio.fgv.br/cts DiploFoundation associate - www.diplomacy.edu PoliTICs Magazine Advisory Committee - http://www.politics.org.br/ Subscribe "Digital Rights: Latin America & the Caribbean" - http://www.digitalrightslac.net/en
participants (5)
-
Marianne Franklin -
Marilia Maciel -
Niels ten Oever -
Stephanie Perrin -
zalnieriute .