Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
Dear board members, As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN. Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through. I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC. Just my eurocent idea Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
Hi Rudi, I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum? I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject? Kind regards, Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
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Homepage for the region: http://www.euralo.org
Hi As a Euralo board member and NCUC/SG rep on the GNSO maybe I can amplify. We do a "check in" procedure annually in the first place because we have a fairly large membership of over 200 organizational and individual members and have competitive elections to positions, e.g. Council seats, NCSG and NCUC chairs, excom. So it seems reasonable that the voting polity in a contested election should comprise only those able to must the energy to reply to an email and say yes I am still here and interested in participating. I suppose secondarily it could be of some use when we're trying to work out a policy position, i.e. if someone weighs in on a list discussion with a strong view that affects the ability to get consensus, it may be worth determining if they're an active member or not. Conversely, you don't have to hold up the consensus building process because you've not yet heard from phantoms. We debated what was the appropriate threshold of activity to be classified as active. As Mathieu notes, this is complicated as given peoples' availability and the natural tendency to pick and choose items you're willing to devote energy to based on interests and bandwidth at a given time. So while in principle you could say that someone who has never participated in online discussions or shown up for a GA in a year should be deemed inactive, in practice this might be unfair. An annual check in mail prior to an election cycle is a pretty low impact way of determining at least a baseline level of commitment. If a member has really fallen off the map, this is a way to know. And with number of members in Euralo, it wouldn't be difficult to execute. And it could increase the credibility of claims to represent xyz actors. All in all, Rudi's suggestion seems sensible enough to me. Best, Bill On Aug 8, 2012, at 5:21 PM, Mathieu Paapst wrote:
Hi Rudi,
I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum?
I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject?
Kind regards,
Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL
Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
_______________________________________________ EURO-Discuss mailing list EURO-Discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/euro-discuss
Homepage for the region: http://www.euralo.org
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Homepage for the region: http://www.euralo.org
+1 On 9 Aug 2012, at 09:10, William Drake wrote:
Hi
As a Euralo board member and NCUC/SG rep on the GNSO maybe I can amplify. We do a "check in" procedure annually in the first place because we have a fairly large membership of over 200 organizational and individual members and have competitive elections to positions, e.g. Council seats, NCSG and NCUC chairs, excom. So it seems reasonable that the voting polity in a contested election should comprise only those able to must the energy to reply to an email and say yes I am still here and interested in participating. I suppose secondarily it could be of some use when we're trying to work out a policy position, i.e. if someone weighs in on a list discussion with a strong view that affects the ability to get consensus, it may be worth determining if they're an active member or not. Conversely, you don't have to hold up the consensus building process because you've not yet heard from phantoms.
We debated what was the appropriate threshold of activity to be classified as active. As Mathieu notes, this is complicated as given peoples' availability and the natural tendency to pick and choose items you're willing to devote energy to based on interests and bandwidth at a given time. So while in principle you could say that someone who has never participated in online discussions or shown up for a GA in a year should be deemed inactive, in practice this might be unfair.
An annual check in mail prior to an election cycle is a pretty low impact way of determining at least a baseline level of commitment. If a member has really fallen off the map, this is a way to know. And with number of members in Euralo, it wouldn't be difficult to execute. And it could increase the credibility of claims to represent xyz actors.
All in all, Rudi's suggestion seems sensible enough to me.
Best,
Bill
On Aug 8, 2012, at 5:21 PM, Mathieu Paapst wrote:
Hi Rudi,
I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum?
I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject?
Kind regards,
Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL
Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
_______________________________________________ EURO-Discuss mailing list EURO-Discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/euro-discuss
Homepage for the region: http://www.euralo.org
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Homepage for the region: http://www.euralo.org
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Homepage for the region: http://www.euralo.org
+1, but with a further comment. Since the beginning of ALAC, and even before, the issue has been how to foster contribution to the policy-making process. The ALSes have been seen as a way to have discussions on the local level, and bring the issues to a regional level. My personal opinion is that it is extremely likely that, if ALSes are not engaged in the regional policy development process, most probably they are not even discussing the issues locally. If this is the case, they are completely useless for the ICANN policy development process, so there will be no harm in cutting the dead branches. On the other hand, there has been an extremely lively discussion, many years ago, about individual contributions to policy development. My recollection is that EURALO was going to open a process to allow individual membership, in a form to be discussed. Where are we with this process? My worry is that, while we give a formal status to possibly inactive structures, we put psychological barreers to participation from individuals who could potentially contribute. Yes, I understand that I do have a potential conflict of interest, being an individual not belonging to any ALS raising this point, but look at it from a different point of view: I am a fan of *the power of contribution* rather than *the power of voting* (some might remember my approach to the GNSO review). And, ALS or not ALS, you can't stop me from expressing my opinion anyway... ;>) R. -----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Avri Doria Inviato: giovedì 9 agosto 2012 11:42 A: Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: Staff At Large Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes +1 On 9 Aug 2012, at 09:10, William Drake wrote:
Hi
As a Euralo board member and NCUC/SG rep on the GNSO maybe I can amplify. We do a "check in" procedure annually in the first place because we have a fairly large membership of over 200 organizational and individual members and have competitive elections to positions, e.g. Council seats, NCSG and NCUC chairs, excom. So it seems reasonable that the voting polity in a contested election should comprise only those able to must the energy to reply to an email and say yes I am still here and interested in participating. I suppose secondarily it could be of some use when we're trying to work out a policy position, i.e. if someone weighs in on a list discussion with a strong view that affects the ability to get consensus, it may be worth determining if they're an active member or not. Conversely, you don't have to hold up the consensus building process because you've not yet heard from phantoms.
We debated what was the appropriate threshold of activity to be classified as active. As Mathieu notes, this is complicated as given peoples' availability and the natural tendency to pick and choose items you're willing to devote energy to based on interests and bandwidth at a given time. So while in principle you could say that someone who has never participated in online discussions or shown up for a GA in a year should be deemed inactive, in practice this might be unfair.
An annual check in mail prior to an election cycle is a pretty low impact way of determining at least a baseline level of commitment. If a member has really fallen off the map, this is a way to know. And with number of members in Euralo, it wouldn't be difficult to execute. And it could increase the credibility of claims to represent xyz actors.
All in all, Rudi's suggestion seems sensible enough to me.
Best,
Bill
On Aug 8, 2012, at 5:21 PM, Mathieu Paapst wrote:
Hi Rudi,
I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum?
I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject?
Kind regards,
Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL
Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
_______________________________________________ EURO-Discuss mailing list EURO-Discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/euro-discuss
Homepage for the region: http://www.euralo.org
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Homepage for the region: http://www.euralo.org
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Homepage for the region: http://www.euralo.org
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Dear all, Does anybody have information on correlation between changes in ALS leadership and its activity in ALAC or RALO? Can we use national IGFs to update information about ALS leadership and to share concerns about unperformed role of inactive ALSes? Actually, in post-Soviet space we need more success stories of active ALSes, but, in any case, national IGFs are extremely good platform to share ALAC mission. Best regards, Oksana 2012/8/10 Roberto Gaetano <roberto_gaetano@hotmail.com>:
+1, but with a further comment. Since the beginning of ALAC, and even before, the issue has been how to foster contribution to the policy-making process. The ALSes have been seen as a way to have discussions on the local level, and bring the issues to a regional level. My personal opinion is that it is extremely likely that, if ALSes are not engaged in the regional policy development process, most probably they are not even discussing the issues locally. If this is the case, they are completely useless for the ICANN policy development process, so there will be no harm in cutting the dead branches. On the other hand, there has been an extremely lively discussion, many years ago, about individual contributions to policy development. My recollection is that EURALO was going to open a process to allow individual membership, in a form to be discussed. Where are we with this process? My worry is that, while we give a formal status to possibly inactive structures, we put psychological barreers to participation from individuals who could potentially contribute. Yes, I understand that I do have a potential conflict of interest, being an individual not belonging to any ALS raising this point, but look at it from a different point of view: I am a fan of *the power of contribution* rather than *the power of voting* (some might remember my approach to the GNSO review). And, ALS or not ALS, you can't stop me from expressing my opinion anyway... ;>) R.
-----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Avri Doria Inviato: giovedì 9 agosto 2012 11:42 A: Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: Staff At Large Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
+1
On 9 Aug 2012, at 09:10, William Drake wrote:
Hi
As a Euralo board member and NCUC/SG rep on the GNSO maybe I can amplify. We do a "check in" procedure annually in the first place because we have a fairly large membership of over 200 organizational and individual members and have competitive elections to positions, e.g. Council seats, NCSG and NCUC chairs, excom. So it seems reasonable that the voting polity in a contested election should comprise only those able to must the energy to reply to an email and say yes I am still here and interested in participating. I suppose secondarily it could be of some use when we're trying to work out a policy position, i.e. if someone weighs in on a list discussion with a strong view that affects the ability to get consensus, it may be worth determining if they're an active member or not. Conversely, you don't have to hold up the consensus building process because you've not yet heard from phantoms.
We debated what was the appropriate threshold of activity to be classified as active. As Mathieu notes, this is complicated as given peoples' availability and the natural tendency to pick and choose items you're willing to devote energy to based on interests and bandwidth at a given time. So while in principle you could say that someone who has never participated in online discussions or shown up for a GA in a year should be deemed inactive, in practice this might be unfair.
An annual check in mail prior to an election cycle is a pretty low impact way of determining at least a baseline level of commitment. If a member has really fallen off the map, this is a way to know. And with number of members in Euralo, it wouldn't be difficult to execute. And it could increase the credibility of claims to represent xyz actors.
All in all, Rudi's suggestion seems sensible enough to me.
Best,
Bill
On Aug 8, 2012, at 5:21 PM, Mathieu Paapst wrote:
Hi Rudi,
I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum?
I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject?
Kind regards,
Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL
Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
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Homepage for the region: http://www.euralo.org
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Dear Oksana, this is a relevant question you raise. There is actually not much consolidated information but many observations on a correlation between personal changes in ALSes or the leadership and the level of participation at EURALO. We guess (but couldn't verify in detail) that those people at KEFKA and the Slovenian Consumer org. who applied for an ALS certification are not in charge any more and their successors don't understand the broader context or simply don't care. And this phenomenon may be true for other cases (like Terre des femmes etc.) as well. As an exception from such a rule we know that the guy at Ynternet.org is still in charge but always delegated the EURALO dossier to (often changing) collaborators who (almost) never followed-up. And he never *responded* to my reminders the last two years. I don't know whether we can "use national IGFs to update information about ALS leadership"? Informally yes, in some cases this may work. But using our splendid networks may be more useful: Rudi offered to check with the ISOC chapters (which are not in question at the moment), I can verify with our German and Swiss members, you could do in Eastern Europe (where we do not have problem cases for the moment). At EuroDIG we are in contact with many national IGFs already, This offers opportunities for some EURALO outreach as well but does not necessarily mean that they are interested in the ALAC mission. Kind regards, Wolf Oksana Prykhodko wrote Mon, 13 Aug 2012 21:49
Dear all,
Does anybody have information on correlation between changes in ALS leadership and its activity in ALAC or RALO?
Can we use national IGFs to update information about ALS leadership and to share concerns about unperformed role of inactive ALSes?
Actually, in post-Soviet space we need more success stories of active ALSes, but, in any case, national IGFs are extremely good platform to share ALAC mission.
Best regards, Oksana
2012/8/10 Roberto Gaetano <roberto_gaetano@hotmail.com>:
+1, but with a further comment. Since the beginning of ALAC, and even before, the issue has been how to foster contribution to the policy-making process. The ALSes have been seen as a way to have discussions on the local level, and bring the issues to a regional level. My personal opinion is that it is extremely likely that, if ALSes are not engaged in the regional policy development process, most probably they are not even discussing the issues locally. If this is the case, they are completely useless for the ICANN policy development process, so there will be no harm in cutting the dead branches. On the other hand, there has been an extremely lively discussion, many years ago, about individual contributions to policy development. My recollection is that EURALO was going to open a process to allow individual membership, in a form to be discussed. Where are we with this process? My worry is that, while we give a formal status to possibly inactive structures, we put psychological barreers to participation from individuals who could potentially contribute. Yes, I understand that I do have a potential conflict of interest, being an individual not belonging to any ALS raising this point, but look at it from a different point of view: I am a fan of *the power of contribution* rather than *the power of voting* (some might remember my approach to the GNSO review). And, ALS or not ALS, you can't stop me from expressing my opinion anyway... ;>) R.
-----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Avri Doria Inviato: giovedì 9 agosto 2012 11:42 A: Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: Staff At Large Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
+1
On 9 Aug 2012, at 09:10, William Drake wrote:
Hi
As a Euralo board member and NCUC/SG rep on the GNSO maybe I can amplify. We do a "check in" procedure annually in the first place because we have a fairly large membership of over 200 organizational and individual members and have competitive elections to positions, e.g. Council seats, NCSG and NCUC chairs, excom. So it seems reasonable that the voting polity in a contested election should comprise only those able to must the energy to reply to an email and say yes I am still here and interested in participating. I suppose secondarily it could be of some use when we're trying to work out a policy position, i.e. if someone weighs in on a list discussion with a strong view that affects the ability to get consensus, it may be worth determining if they're an active member or not. Conversely, you don't have to hold up the consensus building process because you've not yet heard from phantoms.
We debated what was the appropriate threshold of activity to be classified as active. As Mathieu notes, this is complicated as given peoples' availability and the natural tendency to pick and choose items you're willing to devote energy to based on interests and bandwidth at a given time. So while in principle you could say that someone who has never participated in online discussions or shown up for a GA in a year should be deemed inactive, in practice this might be unfair.
An annual check in mail prior to an election cycle is a pretty low impact way of determining at least a baseline level of commitment. If a member has really fallen off the map, this is a way to know. And with number of members in Euralo, it wouldn't be difficult to execute. And it could increase the credibility of claims to represent xyz actors.
All in all, Rudi's suggestion seems sensible enough to me.
Best,
Bill
On Aug 8, 2012, at 5:21 PM, Mathieu Paapst wrote:
Hi Rudi,
I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum?
I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject?
Kind regards,
Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL
Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
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Homepage for the region: http://www.euralo.org
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Dear All, Humanistische Union / German Civil Liberties Union is one of the "non-active ALSes". The fact that ALSes are not actively participating does not necessarily imply that they are not following the discussion at all. I assume that the participation of ALSes is greatly dependent on the engagement of individual members of these organizations. This engagement can vary considerably due to many factors. This should be tolerated as long as low activity levels do not create considerable negative influences for the whole ALO. The Problem of "non-active ALSes" should not be linked with the desire to possible enhance participation options for individuals. Regards, Christoph -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Im Auftrag von Roberto Gaetano Gesendet: Freitag, 10. August 2012 03:14 An: 'Discussion for At-Large Europe' Cc: 'Staff At Large' Betreff: [EURO-Discuss] R: Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes +1, but with a further comment. Since the beginning of ALAC, and even before, the issue has been how to foster contribution to the policy-making process. The ALSes have been seen as a way to have discussions on the local level, and bring the issues to a regional level. My personal opinion is that it is extremely likely that, if ALSes are not engaged in the regional policy development process, most probably they are not even discussing the issues locally. If this is the case, they are completely useless for the ICANN policy development process, so there will be no harm in cutting the dead branches. On the other hand, there has been an extremely lively discussion, many years ago, about individual contributions to policy development. My recollection is that EURALO was going to open a process to allow individual membership, in a form to be discussed. Where are we with this process? My worry is that, while we give a formal status to possibly inactive structures, we put psychological barreers to participation from individuals who could potentially contribute. Yes, I understand that I do have a potential conflict of interest, being an individual not belonging to any ALS raising this point, but look at it from a different point of view: I am a fan of *the power of contribution* rather than *the power of voting* (some might remember my approach to the GNSO review). And, ALS or not ALS, you can't stop me from expressing my opinion anyway... ;>) R. -----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Avri Doria Inviato: giovedì 9 agosto 2012 11:42 A: Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: Staff At Large Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes +1 On 9 Aug 2012, at 09:10, William Drake wrote:
Hi
As a Euralo board member and NCUC/SG rep on the GNSO maybe I can amplify. We do a "check in" procedure annually in the first place because we have a fairly large membership of over 200 organizational and individual members and have competitive elections to positions, e.g. Council seats, NCSG and NCUC chairs, excom. So it seems reasonable that the voting polity in a contested election should comprise only those able to must the energy to reply to an email and say yes I am still here and interested in participating. I suppose secondarily it could be of some use when we're trying to work out a policy position, i.e. if someone weighs in on a list discussion with a strong view that affects the ability to get consensus, it may be worth determining if they're an active member or not. Conversely, you don't have to hold up the consensus building process because you've not yet heard from phantoms.
We debated what was the appropriate threshold of activity to be classified as active. As Mathieu notes, this is complicated as given peoples' availability and the natural tendency to pick and choose items you're willing to devote energy to based on interests and bandwidth at a given time. So while in principle you could say that someone who has never participated in online discussions or shown up for a GA in a year should be deemed inactive, in practice this might be unfair.
An annual check in mail prior to an election cycle is a pretty low impact way of determining at least a baseline level of commitment. If a member has really fallen off the map, this is a way to know. And with number of members in Euralo, it wouldn't be difficult to execute. And it could increase the credibility of claims to represent xyz actors.
All in all, Rudi's suggestion seems sensible enough to me.
Best,
Bill
On Aug 8, 2012, at 5:21 PM, Mathieu Paapst wrote:
Hi Rudi,
I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum?
I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject?
Kind regards,
Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL
Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
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well said wolfgang ________________________________ Von: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org im Auftrag von Christoph Bruch Gesendet: Do 16.08.2012 09:51 An: 'Discussion for At-Large Europe' Cc: 'Sven Lueders (Humanistische Union)' Betreff: Re: [EURO-Discuss] R: Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes Dear All, Humanistische Union / German Civil Liberties Union is one of the "non-active ALSes". The fact that ALSes are not actively participating does not necessarily imply that they are not following the discussion at all. I assume that the participation of ALSes is greatly dependent on the engagement of individual members of these organizations. This engagement can vary considerably due to many factors. This should be tolerated as long as low activity levels do not create considerable negative influences for the whole ALO. The Problem of "non-active ALSes" should not be linked with the desire to possible enhance participation options for individuals. Regards, Christoph -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Im Auftrag von Roberto Gaetano Gesendet: Freitag, 10. August 2012 03:14 An: 'Discussion for At-Large Europe' Cc: 'Staff At Large' Betreff: [EURO-Discuss] R: Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes +1, but with a further comment. Since the beginning of ALAC, and even before, the issue has been how to foster contribution to the policy-making process. The ALSes have been seen as a way to have discussions on the local level, and bring the issues to a regional level. My personal opinion is that it is extremely likely that, if ALSes are not engaged in the regional policy development process, most probably they are not even discussing the issues locally. If this is the case, they are completely useless for the ICANN policy development process, so there will be no harm in cutting the dead branches. On the other hand, there has been an extremely lively discussion, many years ago, about individual contributions to policy development. My recollection is that EURALO was going to open a process to allow individual membership, in a form to be discussed. Where are we with this process? My worry is that, while we give a formal status to possibly inactive structures, we put psychological barreers to participation from individuals who could potentially contribute. Yes, I understand that I do have a potential conflict of interest, being an individual not belonging to any ALS raising this point, but look at it from a different point of view: I am a fan of *the power of contribution* rather than *the power of voting* (some might remember my approach to the GNSO review). And, ALS or not ALS, you can't stop me from expressing my opinion anyway... ;>) R. -----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Avri Doria Inviato: giovedì 9 agosto 2012 11:42 A: Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: Staff At Large Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes +1 On 9 Aug 2012, at 09:10, William Drake wrote:
Hi
As a Euralo board member and NCUC/SG rep on the GNSO maybe I can amplify. We do a "check in" procedure annually in the first place because we have a fairly large membership of over 200 organizational and individual members and have competitive elections to positions, e.g. Council seats, NCSG and NCUC chairs, excom. So it seems reasonable that the voting polity in a contested election should comprise only those able to must the energy to reply to an email and say yes I am still here and interested in participating. I suppose secondarily it could be of some use when we're trying to work out a policy position, i.e. if someone weighs in on a list discussion with a strong view that affects the ability to get consensus, it may be worth determining if they're an active member or not. Conversely, you don't have to hold up the consensus building process because you've not yet heard from phantoms.
We debated what was the appropriate threshold of activity to be classified as active. As Mathieu notes, this is complicated as given peoples' availability and the natural tendency to pick and choose items you're willing to devote energy to based on interests and bandwidth at a given time. So while in principle you could say that someone who has never participated in online discussions or shown up for a GA in a year should be deemed inactive, in practice this might be unfair.
An annual check in mail prior to an election cycle is a pretty low impact way of determining at least a baseline level of commitment. If a member has really fallen off the map, this is a way to know. And with number of members in Euralo, it wouldn't be difficult to execute. And it could increase the credibility of claims to represent xyz actors.
All in all, Rudi's suggestion seems sensible enough to me.
Best,
Bill
On Aug 8, 2012, at 5:21 PM, Mathieu Paapst wrote:
Hi Rudi,
I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum?
I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject?
Kind regards,
Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL
Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
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Dear Christoph and all, thanks for this feedback! I think your description and assessment of particular ALS circumstances is important to avoid misunderstandings or misleading conclusions -- what I tried to explain at various Secretariats meetings. The term "non-active" itself is misleading and even prejudiced in a context of volunteer organizations. "In-active" in what sense? Purely in regard of participation at current EURALO or ALAC discussions or in a broader sense? And I insist, being active in a volunteers context is always a question of particular capacities! And these - as we know - are always limited, besides some exceptions. As I know from various exchanges and calls with members, many of our German ALSes, as Christoph mentioned and just to give some more examples, are extremely active on the ground and sometimes even on the national level. As a common understanding, we expect that our members lobby and advocate for "the interests of the common Internet user" ... But what does this mean in a daily context? Have a look at the Website of Foebud (unfortunately in German only) and their scope of activities (with very limited means), among others organizing the annual Big Brother Award (what became a model for Austria and Switzerland as well). And I often see Rena Tangens in the late evening news or specialized programs: http://www.foebud.org/ Or Netzwerk Neue Medien (NNM), a lose network of highly active folks like Markus Beckedahl conducting one of the most famous blogs in Germany: http://netzpolitik.org/ Or take FITUG (Lutz), FIfF, APTI in Romania and other good examples for a long-term engagement and in the best sense of pursuing the "interest of Internet users". Who dares to blame those people for "not actively" participating in our monthly calls? Or current ALAC consultations on multiple issues? I am rather pleased having such members doing the day-to-day or dirty work on the ground! In this context, let's also talk about the other side of the coin (the dark side of the moon) or the enabling environment for our member orgs. Expectations towards our members are always cheap to have as long as we forget about *incentives* we can offer - or not. When could we count on such incentives or encouragements for our members from the ICANN side for the last three years? We are supposed to conduct a GA every year as a key organizational instrument to mobilize and include our members in EURALO policy development - a key feature of any In-reach. Nice idea in fact! We conducted three GAs in Vilnius (2010), Belgrade (2011) and Stockholm (2012). We assembled a relevant portion of our members each time -- by joining us on their own expenses what most of them couldn't afford! As we discussed in Stockholm again - and I tend to revolve the prayer wheel -, community building, pro-active member participation and involvement etc. doesn't work on a mere virtual level and without regular F2F meetings (at least every two years). I remember that Avri doesn't share this POV ;-) As Christoph pointed out and for all these reasons stressed above, I refuse to use any inappropriate or insulting term like "in-active" in this context. I agree, regarding some particular cases mentioned yesterday when members never responded to anything from the beginning or more than two years, we need to find a solution or decertification in the worst case. In the given cases it becomes a question of our credibility: One the one hand, we are interested to organize as many members as possible (one member per country as a long-term goal), on the other hand we need to provide an appropriate In-reach with our members. Kind regards, Wolf Christoph Bruch wrote Thu, 16 Aug 2012 09:51
Dear All,
Humanistische Union / German Civil Liberties Union is one of the "non-active ALSes".
The fact that ALSes are not actively participating does not necessarily imply that they are not following the discussion at all.
I assume that the participation of ALSes is greatly dependent on the engagement of individual members of these organizations.
This engagement can vary considerably due to many factors.
This should be tolerated as long as low activity levels do not create considerable negative influences for the whole ALO.
The Problem of "non-active ALSes" should not be linked with the desire to possible enhance participation options for individuals.
Regards,
Christoph
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Im Auftrag von Roberto Gaetano Gesendet: Freitag, 10. August 2012 03:14 An: 'Discussion for At-Large Europe' Cc: 'Staff At Large' Betreff: [EURO-Discuss] R: Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
+1, but with a further comment. Since the beginning of ALAC, and even before, the issue has been how to foster contribution to the policy-making process. The ALSes have been seen as a way to have discussions on the local level, and bring the issues to a regional level. My personal opinion is that it is extremely likely that, if ALSes are not engaged in the regional policy development process, most probably they are not even discussing the issues locally. If this is the case, they are completely useless for the ICANN policy development process, so there will be no harm in cutting the dead branches. On the other hand, there has been an extremely lively discussion, many years ago, about individual contributions to policy development. My recollection is that EURALO was going to open a process to allow individual membership, in a form to be discussed. Where are we with this process? My worry is that, while we give a formal status to possibly inactive structures, we put psychological barreers to participation from individuals who could potentially contribute. Yes, I understand that I do have a potential conflict of interest, being an individual not belonging to any ALS raising this point, but look at it from a different point of view: I am a fan of *the power of contribution* rather than *the power of voting* (some might remember my approach to the GNSO review). And, ALS or not ALS, you can't stop me from expressing my opinion anyway... ;>) R.
-----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Avri Doria Inviato: giovedì 9 agosto 2012 11:42 A: Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: Staff At Large Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
+1
On 9 Aug 2012, at 09:10, William Drake wrote:
Hi
As a Euralo board member and NCUC/SG rep on the GNSO maybe I can amplify. We do a "check in" procedure annually in the first place because we have a fairly large membership of over 200 organizational and individual members and have competitive elections to positions, e.g. Council seats, NCSG and NCUC chairs, excom. So it seems reasonable that the voting polity in a contested election should comprise only those able to must the energy to reply to an email and say yes I am still here and interested in participating. I suppose secondarily it could be of some use when we're trying to work out a policy position, i.e. if someone weighs in on a list discussion with a strong view that affects the ability to get consensus, it may be worth determining if they're an active member or not. Conversely, you don't have to hold up the consensus building process because you've not yet heard from phantoms.
We debated what was the appropriate threshold of activity to be classified as active. As Mathieu notes, this is complicated as given peoples' availability and the natural tendency to pick and choose items you're willing to devote energy to based on interests and bandwidth at a given time. So while in principle you could say that someone who has never participated in online discussions or shown up for a GA in a year should be deemed inactive, in practice this might be unfair.
An annual check in mail prior to an election cycle is a pretty low impact way of determining at least a baseline level of commitment. If a member has really fallen off the map, this is a way to know. And with number of members in Euralo, it wouldn't be difficult to execute. And it could increase the credibility of claims to represent xyz actors.
All in all, Rudi's suggestion seems sensible enough to me.
Best,
Bill
On Aug 8, 2012, at 5:21 PM, Mathieu Paapst wrote:
Hi Rudi,
I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum?
I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject?
Kind regards,
Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL
Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
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Disclaimer: I am travelling, and have erratic connection to the internet, I cannot therefore guarantee prompt replies to the questions on the table, nor to have all the reference papers handy This discussion raises some interesting strategic issues. The question is not, IMHO, if ALSes are "active" or not in terms of doing activities that are for the benefit of the general internet user. The question is whether ALSes are fulfilling the purpose for which they were certified. As per my disclaimer, I have no access to the statutory papers, but off my memory the ALAC, with RALOs and ALSes, has been created to provide input from the At-Large Internet Community to the ICANN policy development process. This is, IMHO, the litmus test against which we have to measure the effectiveness of the ALSes, RALOs, and ALAC as a whole. In a nutshell, different organizations can be extremely active and extremely useful for different purposes related to the internet users, but if they do not participate in the policy development process they fail, IMHO, to satisfy the requirements for being an ALS. Personally, I believe that this should be a discussion for the whole ALAC, not just for EURALO, so I am putting the Chairperson in copy. About the dark side of the moon, I do believe that the issue of the financial contribution to ALSes by ICANN is tightly related to the policy contribution to ICANN by ALSes. The GA example is telling, in this sense. All mentioned GAs took place in conjunction to events that, although important for the internet and its users, were not ICANN events. In particular the 2012 GA took place few days apart from an ICANN meeting in Europe. I have not followed things closely in the last couple of years, so there might be some very good reasons that I ignore, but seeing this from the outside, or possibly from the point of view of the ICANN Board or another ICANN Constituency, it raises eyebrows. I can hear the legitimate question on why ICANN should fund participation to the EURALO GA (when this translates to participation to the IGF or other non-ICANN event) to people who are not interested in participating to ICANN meetings? I might be wrong, but if the next EURALO GA falling in a year when the ICANN meeting is held in Europe (2014?) will be held at the ICANN meeting site, there should be no problem in funding participation to ALS representatives (or individuals, if they comply with the requirements) that are active participants to the ICANN policy development process. Maybe as a follow up to this discussion we can make a proposal for the Board. Sébastien, what do you think? Cheers, R. -----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Wolf Ludwig Inviato: giovedì 16 agosto 2012 17:53 A: bruch@zedat.fu-berlin.de, Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: 'Sven Lueders (Humanistische Union)' Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] R: Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes Dear Christoph and all, thanks for this feedback! I think your description and assessment of particular ALS circumstances is important to avoid misunderstandings or misleading conclusions -- what I tried to explain at various Secretariats meetings. The term "non-active" itself is misleading and even prejudiced in a context of volunteer organizations. "In-active" in what sense? Purely in regard of participation at current EURALO or ALAC discussions or in a broader sense? And I insist, being active in a volunteers context is always a question of particular capacities! And these - as we know - are always limited, besides some exceptions. As I know from various exchanges and calls with members, many of our German ALSes, as Christoph mentioned and just to give some more examples, are extremely active on the ground and sometimes even on the national level. As a common understanding, we expect that our members lobby and advocate for "the interests of the common Internet user" ... But what does this mean in a daily context? Have a look at the Website of Foebud (unfortunately in German only) and their scope of activities (with very limited means), among others organizing the annual Big Brother Award (what became a model for Austria and Switzerland as well). And I often see Rena Tangens in the late evening news or specialized programs: http://www.foebud.org/ Or Netzwerk Neue Medien (NNM), a lose network of highly active folks like Markus Beckedahl conducting one of the most famous blogs in Germany: http://netzpolitik.org/ Or take FITUG (Lutz), FIfF, APTI in Romania and other good examples for a long-term engagement and in the best sense of pursuing the "interest of Internet users". Who dares to blame those people for "not actively" participating in our monthly calls? Or current ALAC consultations on multiple issues? I am rather pleased having such members doing the day-to-day or dirty work on the ground! In this context, let's also talk about the other side of the coin (the dark side of the moon) or the enabling environment for our member orgs. Expectations towards our members are always cheap to have as long as we forget about *incentives* we can offer - or not. When could we count on such incentives or encouragements for our members from the ICANN side for the last three years? We are supposed to conduct a GA every year as a key organizational instrument to mobilize and include our members in EURALO policy development - a key feature of any In-reach. Nice idea in fact! We conducted three GAs in Vilnius (2010), Belgrade (2011) and Stockholm (2012). We assembled a relevant portion of our members each time -- by joining us on their own expenses what most of them couldn't afford! As we discussed in Stockholm again - and I tend to revolve the prayer wheel -, community building, pro-active member participation and involvement etc. doesn't work on a mere virtual level and without regular F2F meetings (at least every two years). I remember that Avri doesn't share this POV ;-) As Christoph pointed out and for all these reasons stressed above, I refuse to use any inappropriate or insulting term like "in-active" in this context. I agree, regarding some particular cases mentioned yesterday when members never responded to anything from the beginning or more than two years, we need to find a solution or decertification in the worst case. In the given cases it becomes a question of our credibility: One the one hand, we are interested to organize as many members as possible (one member per country as a long-term goal), on the other hand we need to provide an appropriate In-reach with our members. Kind regards, Wolf Christoph Bruch wrote Thu, 16 Aug 2012 09:51
Dear All,
Humanistische Union / German Civil Liberties Union is one of the "non-active ALSes".
The fact that ALSes are not actively participating does not necessarily imply that they are not following the discussion at all.
I assume that the participation of ALSes is greatly dependent on the engagement of individual members of these organizations.
This engagement can vary considerably due to many factors.
This should be tolerated as long as low activity levels do not create considerable negative influences for the whole ALO.
The Problem of "non-active ALSes" should not be linked with the desire to possible enhance participation options for individuals.
Regards,
Christoph
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Im Auftrag von Roberto Gaetano Gesendet: Freitag, 10. August 2012 03:14 An: 'Discussion for At-Large Europe' Cc: 'Staff At Large' Betreff: [EURO-Discuss] R: Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
+1, but with a further comment. Since the beginning of ALAC, and even before, the issue has been how to foster contribution to the policy-making process. The ALSes have been seen as a way to have discussions on the local level, and bring the issues to a regional level. My personal opinion is that it is extremely likely that, if ALSes are not engaged in the regional policy development process, most probably they are not even discussing the issues locally. If this is the case, they are completely useless for the ICANN policy development process, so there will be no harm in cutting the dead branches. On the other hand, there has been an extremely lively discussion, many years ago, about individual contributions to policy development. My recollection is that EURALO was going to open a process to allow individual membership, in a form to be discussed. Where are we with this process? My worry is that, while we give a formal status to possibly inactive structures, we put psychological barreers to participation from individuals who could potentially contribute. Yes, I understand that I do have a potential conflict of interest, being an individual not belonging to any ALS raising this point, but look at it from a different point of view: I am a fan of *the power of contribution* rather than *the power of voting* (some might remember my approach to the GNSO review). And, ALS or not ALS, you can't stop me from expressing my opinion anyway... ;>) R.
-----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Avri Doria Inviato: giovedì 9 agosto 2012 11:42 A: Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: Staff At Large Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
+1
On 9 Aug 2012, at 09:10, William Drake wrote:
Hi
As a Euralo board member and NCUC/SG rep on the GNSO maybe I can amplify. We do a "check in" procedure annually in the first place because we have a fairly large membership of over 200 organizational and individual members and have competitive elections to positions, e.g. Council seats, NCSG and NCUC chairs, excom. So it seems reasonable that the voting polity in a contested election should comprise only those able to must the energy to reply to an email and say yes I am still here and interested in participating. I suppose secondarily it could be of some use when we're trying to work out a policy position, i.e. if someone weighs in on a list discussion with a strong view that affects the ability to get consensus, it may be worth determining if they're an active member or not. Conversely, you don't have to hold up the consensus building process because you've not yet heard from phantoms.
We debated what was the appropriate threshold of activity to be classified as active. As Mathieu notes, this is complicated as given peoples' availability and the natural tendency to pick and choose items you're willing to devote energy to based on interests and bandwidth at a given time. So while in principle you could say that someone who has never participated in online discussions or shown up for a GA in a year should be deemed inactive, in practice this might be unfair.
An annual check in mail prior to an election cycle is a pretty low impact way of determining at least a baseline level of commitment. If a member has really fallen off the map, this is a way to know. And with number of members in Euralo, it wouldn't be difficult to execute. And it could increase the credibility of claims to represent xyz actors.
All in all, Rudi's suggestion seems sensible enough to me.
Best,
Bill
On Aug 8, 2012, at 5:21 PM, Mathieu Paapst wrote:
Hi Rudi,
I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum?
I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject?
Kind regards,
Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL
Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
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Dear Roberto, thanks for this input what is much appreciated and I agree with you that this discussion has a strategic dimension for the whole ALS and regional model as well – not only at EURALO. And I would even go a step further: This reflection has relevance for the whole multi-stakeholder model as such. I inserted my comments and partly disagreements below under your remarks (RG) This discussion raises some interesting strategic issues. The question is not, IMHO, if ALSes are "active" or not in terms of doing activities that are for the benefit of the general internet user. The question is whether ALSes are fulfilling the purpose for which they were certified. (Wolf) I think both questions are relevant and need to be considered. Because they reflect different standpoints – what is also typical for us BTW --: A top-down and a bottom-up approach. Your arguments reflect the first, talk about expectations, fulfilling purposes, requirements and the like from the top or the ICANN org. perspective, while mine argue from a bottom line or civil society perspective (what stands for my political history). And I believe, both and even more perspectives are needed, if ICANN really cares about multi-stakeholderism! (RG) As per my disclaimer, I have no access to the statutory papers, but off my memory the ALAC, with RALOs and ALSes, has been created to provide input from the At-Large Internet Community to the ICANN policy development process. This is, IMHO, the litmus test against which we have to measure the effectiveness of the ALSes, RALOs, and ALAC as a whole. (Wolf) I agree that this was the idea, key feature and purpose “… to provide input from …”. But as we know, this didn’t properly work neither when ALAC members were hand or accidentally selected among some technical or academic or whatsoever experts. Plus the question of legitimacy or whom this people represented or were connected with? I knew ALAC members who just represented their expertise (mostly rather technical) but had no ties with current political debates or actors in their country or from the ground. The user POV was nothing but their individual POV. And I am not sure whether this former representation model passed the litmus test, perhaps in terms of a formal “effectiveness”? But ALAC members were often aloof or disconnected from / not part of communities. (RG) In a nutshell, different organizations can be extremely active and extremely useful for different purposes related to the internet users, but if they do not participate in the policy development process they fail, IMHO, to satisfy the requirements for being an ALS. Personally, I believe that this should be a discussion for the whole ALAC, not just for EURALO, so I am putting the Chairperson in copy. (Wolf) As this is more than a EURALO debate, I dared to copy other ExCom members in (Cheryl, Evan, Carton, Tijani) besides Beau Brendler, the NARALO Chair. I don’t agree with your observation or conclusion that “ALS do not participate in the policy development process … (or) fail to satisfy the requirements …”. First, this is a biased top-down perception neglecting various factors. And just imagine, if 170 ALSes (latest state) would regularly and actively participate in ICANN’s policy development process, At-Large and RALOs would proof to be completely under-staffed to manage and bundle all these inputs. Plus, the current consultation procedures and deadlines would be far too short … Don’t forget, we knew from the beginning that we have to deal with volunteer structures and not business constituencies which can do this in their day-to-day work. And in your assessment you forget about the representative element (like in other political systems) between ALSes – RALOs – ALAC. ALSes s/elect their regional representatives to ALAC (every two years) and they DO and NEED to “participate in the – regular – policy development process”. If not, they will get in trouble. And I can assure you, that EURLO’s ALAC members over the last years did their job – some of them with excellence! For our ALAC reps. it’s a MUST, for ALSes participation in the policy development process it’s a CAN or option depending on the particular issue. And besides our regular ALAC members, some more ALS reps. participate in our monthly calls (usually around 7 – 10 what is a respectable quorum) besides some individual members. Both are welcome, therefore I don’t like the artificial contradistinction ALSes versus ind. members. (RG) About the dark side of the moon, I do believe that the issue of the financial contribution to ALSes by ICANN is tightly related to the policy contribution to ICANN by ALSes. The GA example is telling, in this sense. All mentioned GAs took place in conjunction to events that, although important for the internet and its users, were not ICANN events. In particular the 2012 GA took place few days apart from an ICANN meeting in Europe. (Wolf) This is a key point of my reasoning, Roberto. And in this context let’s talk about the gaps between ICANN claims and realities. Because you cannot always refer to shortcomings on one side by neglecting those on the other side. From my perception I have seen that the implementation of the RALO and ALS model over the last five years had started with an applied handbrake. There was a lady in-charge in Brussels who did her best to treat RALOs and downwards as bothersome supplicants. You may remember how long we had to fight for the At-Large Summit in Mexico (2009) with discouraging support at the beginning. After that, things became progressively better and it was the first time when I felt some kind of honest commitment from the other side. And community participation improved considerably after Mexico (the encouragement and incentive factor). (RG) I have not followed things closely in the last couple of years, so there might be some very good reasons that I ignore, but seeing this from the outside, or possibly from the point of view of the ICANN Board or another ICANN Constituency, it raises eyebrows. I can hear the legitimate question on why ICANN should fund participation to the EURALO GA (when this translates to participation to the IGF or other non-ICANN event) to people who are not interested in participating to ICANN meetings? I might be wrong, but if the next EURALO GA falling in a year when the ICANN meeting is held in Europe (2014?) will be held at the ICANN meeting site, there should be no problem in funding participation to ALS representatives (or individuals, if they comply with the requirements) that are active participants to the ICANN policy development process. Maybe as a follow up to this discussion we can make a proposal for the Board. Sébastien, what do you think? (Wolf) When we talk about our Gas, let’s distinguish between causes and consequences: For the first two GAs (Paris 2008, Mexico 2009) we had a full house (around 90 per cent participation) – supported by ICANN at the time. In 2010 at the Brussels meeting, we had to organize a “Showcase” without members (and ICANN support) what became a farce and provoked much frustration among our members. We stolidly applied for F2F (supported) GAs the following years what was ignored (last time for Prague again) and it was ICANN’s lacking commitment – by neglecting its own “bottom-up” and “multi-stakeholder” claims – when we decided to organize our annual GAs offside or inline with another regional important policy event: EuroDIG. In a multi-stakeholder setup ICANN cannot always impose requirements on others but must learn to fulfil its own pretensions! We are still learning and trying to fulfil our mission and purpose but this is not a one-way road. We need to count on the other side as well and whether they are willing to fulfil their pretensions or promisesl Let me suggest another litmus test: Let’s bet when the next At-Large Summit will take place … Kind regards, Wolf Roberto Gaetano wrote Fri, 17 Aug 2012 23:21:
Disclaimer: I am travelling, and have erratic connection to the internet, I cannot therefore guarantee prompt replies to the questions on the table, nor to have all the reference papers handy
(...)
-----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Wolf Ludwig Inviato: giovedì 16 agosto 2012 17:53 A: bruch@zedat.fu-berlin.de, Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: 'Sven Lueders (Humanistische Union)' Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] R: Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
Dear Christoph and all,
thanks for this feedback! I think your description and assessment of particular ALS circumstances is important to avoid misunderstandings or misleading conclusions -- what I tried to explain at various Secretariats meetings.
The term "non-active" itself is misleading and even prejudiced in a context of volunteer organizations. "In-active" in what sense? Purely in regard of participation at current EURALO or ALAC discussions or in a broader sense? And I insist, being active in a volunteers context is always a question of particular capacities! And these - as we know - are always limited, besides some exceptions.
As I know from various exchanges and calls with members, many of our German ALSes, as Christoph mentioned and just to give some more examples, are extremely active on the ground and sometimes even on the national level. As a common understanding, we expect that our members lobby and advocate for "the interests of the common Internet user" ... But what does this mean in a daily context?
Have a look at the Website of Foebud (unfortunately in German only) and their scope of activities (with very limited means), among others organizing the annual Big Brother Award (what became a model for Austria and Switzerland as well). And I often see Rena Tangens in the late evening news or specialized programs: http://www.foebud.org/
Or Netzwerk Neue Medien (NNM), a lose network of highly active folks like Markus Beckedahl conducting one of the most famous blogs in Germany: http://netzpolitik.org/
Or take FITUG (Lutz), FIfF, APTI in Romania and other good examples for a long-term engagement and in the best sense of pursuing the "interest of Internet users". Who dares to blame those people for "not actively" participating in our monthly calls? Or current ALAC consultations on multiple issues? I am rather pleased having such members doing the day-to-day or dirty work on the ground!
In this context, let's also talk about the other side of the coin (the dark side of the moon) or the enabling environment for our member orgs. Expectations towards our members are always cheap to have as long as we forget about *incentives* we can offer - or not. When could we count on such incentives or encouragements for our members from the ICANN side for the last three years?
We are supposed to conduct a GA every year as a key organizational instrument to mobilize and include our members in EURALO policy development - a key feature of any In-reach. Nice idea in fact! We conducted three GAs in Vilnius (2010), Belgrade (2011) and Stockholm (2012). We assembled a relevant portion of our members each time -- by joining us on their own expenses what most of them couldn't afford! As we discussed in Stockholm again - and I tend to revolve the prayer wheel -, community building, pro-active member participation and involvement etc. doesn't work on a mere virtual level and without regular F2F meetings (at least every two years). I remember that Avri doesn't share this POV ;-)
As Christoph pointed out and for all these reasons stressed above, I refuse to use any inappropriate or insulting term like "in-active" in this context. I agree, regarding some particular cases mentioned yesterday when members never responded to anything from the beginning or more than two years, we need to find a solution or decertification in the worst case. In the given cases it becomes a question of our credibility: One the one hand, we are interested to organize as many members as possible (one member per country as a long-term goal), on the other hand we need to provide an appropriate In-reach with our members.
Kind regards, Wolf
Christoph Bruch wrote Thu, 16 Aug 2012 09:51
Dear All,
Humanistische Union / German Civil Liberties Union is one of the "non-active ALSes".
The fact that ALSes are not actively participating does not necessarily imply that they are not following the discussion at all.
I assume that the participation of ALSes is greatly dependent on the engagement of individual members of these organizations.
This engagement can vary considerably due to many factors.
This should be tolerated as long as low activity levels do not create considerable negative influences for the whole ALO.
The Problem of "non-active ALSes" should not be linked with the desire to possible enhance participation options for individuals.
Regards,
Christoph
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Im Auftrag von Roberto Gaetano Gesendet: Freitag, 10. August 2012 03:14 An: 'Discussion for At-Large Europe' Cc: 'Staff At Large' Betreff: [EURO-Discuss] R: Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
+1, but with a further comment. Since the beginning of ALAC, and even before, the issue has been how to foster contribution to the policy-making process. The ALSes have been seen as a way to have discussions on the local level, and bring the issues to a regional level. My personal opinion is that it is extremely likely that, if ALSes are not engaged in the regional policy development process, most probably they are not even discussing the issues locally. If this is the case, they are completely useless for the ICANN policy development process, so there will be no harm in cutting the dead branches. On the other hand, there has been an extremely lively discussion, many years ago, about individual contributions to policy development. My recollection is that EURALO was going to open a process to allow individual membership, in a form to be discussed. Where are we with this process? My worry is that, while we give a formal status to possibly inactive structures, we put psychological barreers to participation from individuals who could potentially contribute. Yes, I understand that I do have a potential conflict of interest, being an individual not belonging to any ALS raising this point, but look at it from a different point of view: I am a fan of *the power of contribution* rather than *the power of voting* (some might remember my approach to the GNSO review). And, ALS or not ALS, you can't stop me from expressing my opinion anyway... ;>) R.
-----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Avri Doria Inviato: giovedì 9 agosto 2012 11:42 A: Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: Staff At Large Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
+1
On 9 Aug 2012, at 09:10, William Drake wrote:
Hi
As a Euralo board member and NCUC/SG rep on the GNSO maybe I can amplify. We do a "check in" procedure annually in the first place because we have a fairly large membership of over 200 organizational and individual members and have competitive elections to positions, e.g. Council seats, NCSG and NCUC chairs, excom. So it seems reasonable that the voting polity in a contested election should comprise only those able to must the energy to reply to an email and say yes I am still here and interested in participating. I suppose secondarily it could be of some use when we're trying to work out a policy position, i.e. if someone weighs in on a list discussion with a strong view that affects the ability to get consensus, it may be worth determining if they're an active member or not. Conversely, you don't have to hold up the consensus building process because you've not yet heard from phantoms.
We debated what was the appropriate threshold of activity to be classified as active. As Mathieu notes, this is complicated as given peoples' availability and the natural tendency to pick and choose items you're willing to devote energy to based on interests and bandwidth at a given time. So while in principle you could say that someone who has never participated in online discussions or shown up for a GA in a year should be deemed inactive, in practice this might be unfair.
An annual check in mail prior to an election cycle is a pretty low impact way of determining at least a baseline level of commitment. If a member has really fallen off the map, this is a way to know. And with number of members in Euralo, it wouldn't be difficult to execute. And it could increase the credibility of claims to represent xyz actors.
All in all, Rudi's suggestion seems sensible enough to me.
Best,
Bill
On Aug 8, 2012, at 5:21 PM, Mathieu Paapst wrote:
Hi Rudi,
I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum?
I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject?
Kind regards,
Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL
Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
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A very interesting discussion indeed. And thoughtful interventions by both gentlemen. Generally speaking, I share Wolf's views. I think ICANN corporate understands that even if only for the optics, the At-Large is central to selling this idea of a bottom-up policy making endeavour. But I'm not so confident that ICANN corporate's embrace of the multi-stakeholder policy development process is linked to a correlated understanding that this absolutely requires continued investment in the At-Large ecosystem. If we go by the history so far, the support has been grudgingly applied. More skin in the game, not less, is required from ICANN corporate here. We know there are ICANN elements who are unanimous that they can have their cake even as they cut their calories; meaning, get bottom-up, multi-stakeholder involvement in policy development on the cheap. For me the sad thing is if we follow this casting, the personal contributions from those of us that are committed and actively engaged shall always be undervalued. - Carlton ============================== Carlton A Samuels Mobile: 876-818-1799 *Strategy, Planning, Governance, Assessment & Turnaround* ============================= On Sat, Aug 18, 2012 at 12:11 PM, Wolf Ludwig <wolf.ludwig@comunica-ch.net>wrote:
Dear Roberto,
thanks for this input what is much appreciated and I agree with you that this discussion has a strategic dimension for the whole ALS and regional model as well – not only at EURALO. And I would even go a step further: This reflection has relevance for the whole multi-stakeholder model as such. I inserted my comments and partly disagreements below under your remarks
(RG) This discussion raises some interesting strategic issues. The question is not, IMHO, if ALSes are "active" or not in terms of doing activities that are for the benefit of the general internet user. The question is whether ALSes are fulfilling the purpose for which they were certified.
(Wolf) I think both questions are relevant and need to be considered. Because they reflect different standpoints – what is also typical for us BTW --: A top-down and a bottom-up approach. Your arguments reflect the first, talk about expectations, fulfilling purposes, requirements and the like from the top or the ICANN org. perspective, while mine argue from a bottom line or civil society perspective (what stands for my political history). And I believe, both and even more perspectives are needed, if ICANN really cares about multi-stakeholderism!
(RG) As per my disclaimer, I have no access to the statutory papers, but off my memory the ALAC, with RALOs and ALSes, has been created to provide input from the At-Large Internet Community to the ICANN policy development process. This is, IMHO, the litmus test against which we have to measure the effectiveness of the ALSes, RALOs, and ALAC as a whole.
(Wolf) I agree that this was the idea, key feature and purpose “… to provide input from …”. But as we know, this didn’t properly work neither when ALAC members were hand or accidentally selected among some technical or academic or whatsoever experts. Plus the question of legitimacy or whom this people represented or were connected with? I knew ALAC members who just represented their expertise (mostly rather technical) but had no ties with current political debates or actors in their country or from the ground. The user POV was nothing but their individual POV. And I am not sure whether this former representation model passed the litmus test, perhaps in terms of a formal “effectiveness”? But ALAC members were often aloof or disconnected from / not part of communities.
(RG) In a nutshell, different organizations can be extremely active and extremely useful for different purposes related to the internet users, but if they do not participate in the policy development process they fail, IMHO, to satisfy the requirements for being an ALS. Personally, I believe that this should be a discussion for the whole ALAC, not just for EURALO, so I am putting the Chairperson in copy.
(Wolf) As this is more than a EURALO debate, I dared to copy other ExCom members in (Cheryl, Evan, Carton, Tijani) besides Beau Brendler, the NARALO Chair. I don’t agree with your observation or conclusion that “ALS do not participate in the policy development process … (or) fail to satisfy the requirements …”. First, this is a biased top-down perception neglecting various factors. And just imagine, if 170 ALSes (latest state) would regularly and actively participate in ICANN’s policy development process, At-Large and RALOs would proof to be completely under-staffed to manage and bundle all these inputs. Plus, the current consultation procedures and deadlines would be far too short … Don’t forget, we knew from the beginning that we have to deal with volunteer structures and not business constituencies which can do this in their day-to-day work.
And in your assessment you forget about the representative element (like in other political systems) between ALSes – RALOs – ALAC. ALSes s/elect their regional representatives to ALAC (every two years) and they DO and NEED to “participate in the – regular – policy development process”. If not, they will get in trouble. And I can assure you, that EURLO’s ALAC members over the last years did their job – some of them with excellence! For our ALAC reps. it’s a MUST, for ALSes participation in the policy development process it’s a CAN or option depending on the particular issue. And besides our regular ALAC members, some more ALS reps. participate in our monthly calls (usually around 7 – 10 what is a respectable quorum) besides some individual members. Both are welcome, therefore I don’t like the artificial contradistinction ALSes versus ind. members.
(RG) About the dark side of the moon, I do believe that the issue of the financial contribution to ALSes by ICANN is tightly related to the policy contribution to ICANN by ALSes. The GA example is telling, in this sense. All mentioned GAs took place in conjunction to events that, although important for the internet and its users, were not ICANN events. In particular the 2012 GA took place few days apart from an ICANN meeting in Europe.
(Wolf) This is a key point of my reasoning, Roberto. And in this context let’s talk about the gaps between ICANN claims and realities. Because you cannot always refer to shortcomings on one side by neglecting those on the other side. From my perception I have seen that the implementation of the RALO and ALS model over the last five years had started with an applied handbrake. There was a lady in-charge in Brussels who did her best to treat RALOs and downwards as bothersome supplicants. You may remember how long we had to fight for the At-Large Summit in Mexico (2009) with discouraging support at the beginning. After that, things became progressively better and it was the first time when I felt some kind of honest commitment from the other side. And community participation improved considerably after Mexico (the encouragement and incentive factor).
(RG) I have not followed things closely in the last couple of years, so there might be some very good reasons that I ignore, but seeing this from the outside, or possibly from the point of view of the ICANN Board or another ICANN Constituency, it raises eyebrows. I can hear the legitimate question on why ICANN should fund participation to the EURALO GA (when this translates to participation to the IGF or other non-ICANN event) to people who are not interested in participating to ICANN meetings? I might be wrong, but if the next EURALO GA falling in a year when the ICANN meeting is held in Europe (2014?) will be held at the ICANN meeting site, there should be no problem in funding participation to ALS representatives (or individuals, if they comply with the requirements) that are active participants to the ICANN policy development process. Maybe as a follow up to this discussion we can make a proposal for the Board. Sébastien, what do you think?
(Wolf) When we talk about our Gas, let’s distinguish between causes and consequences: For the first two GAs (Paris 2008, Mexico 2009) we had a full house (around 90 per cent participation) – supported by ICANN at the time. In 2010 at the Brussels meeting, we had to organize a “Showcase” without members (and ICANN support) what became a farce and provoked much frustration among our members. We stolidly applied for F2F (supported) GAs the following years what was ignored (last time for Prague again) and it was ICANN’s lacking commitment – by neglecting its own “bottom-up” and “multi-stakeholder” claims – when we decided to organize our annual GAs offside or inline with another regional important policy event: EuroDIG. In a multi-stakeholder setup ICANN cannot always impose requirements on others but must learn to fulfil its own pretensions!
We are still learning and trying to fulfil our mission and purpose but this is not a one-way road. We need to count on the other side as well and whether they are willing to fulfil their pretensions or promisesl Let me suggest another litmus test: Let’s bet when the next At-Large Summit will take place …
Kind regards, Wolf
Roberto Gaetano wrote Fri, 17 Aug 2012 23:21:
Disclaimer: I am travelling, and have erratic connection to the internet, I cannot therefore guarantee prompt replies to the questions on the table, nor to have all the reference papers handy
(...)
-----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Wolf Ludwig Inviato: giovedì 16 agosto 2012 17:53 A: bruch@zedat.fu-berlin.de, Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: 'Sven Lueders (Humanistische Union)' Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] R: Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
Dear Christoph and all,
thanks for this feedback! I think your description and assessment of particular ALS circumstances is important to avoid misunderstandings or misleading conclusions -- what I tried to explain at various Secretariats meetings.
The term "non-active" itself is misleading and even prejudiced in a context of volunteer organizations. "In-active" in what sense? Purely in regard of participation at current EURALO or ALAC discussions or in a broader sense? And I insist, being active in a volunteers context is always a question of particular capacities! And these - as we know - are always limited, besides some exceptions.
As I know from various exchanges and calls with members, many of our German ALSes, as Christoph mentioned and just to give some more examples, are extremely active on the ground and sometimes even on the national level. As a common understanding, we expect that our members lobby and advocate for "the interests of the common Internet user" ... But what does this mean in a daily context?
Have a look at the Website of Foebud (unfortunately in German only) and their scope of activities (with very limited means), among others organizing the annual Big Brother Award (what became a model for Austria and Switzerland as well). And I often see Rena Tangens in the late evening news or specialized programs: http://www.foebud.org/
Or Netzwerk Neue Medien (NNM), a lose network of highly active folks like Markus Beckedahl conducting one of the most famous blogs in Germany: http://netzpolitik.org/
Or take FITUG (Lutz), FIfF, APTI in Romania and other good examples for a long-term engagement and in the best sense of pursuing the "interest of Internet users". Who dares to blame those people for "not actively" participating in our monthly calls? Or current ALAC consultations on multiple issues? I am rather pleased having such members doing the day-to-day or dirty work on the ground!
In this context, let's also talk about the other side of the coin (the dark side of the moon) or the enabling environment for our member orgs. Expectations towards our members are always cheap to have as long as we forget about *incentives* we can offer - or not. When could we count on such incentives or encouragements for our members from the ICANN side for the last three years?
We are supposed to conduct a GA every year as a key organizational instrument to mobilize and include our members in EURALO policy development - a key feature of any In-reach. Nice idea in fact! We conducted three GAs in Vilnius (2010), Belgrade (2011) and Stockholm (2012). We assembled a relevant portion of our members each time -- by joining us on their own expenses what most of them couldn't afford! As we discussed in Stockholm again - and I tend to revolve the prayer wheel -, community building, pro-active member participation and involvement etc. doesn't work on a mere virtual level and without regular F2F meetings (at least every two years). I remember that Avri doesn't share this POV ;-)
As Christoph pointed out and for all these reasons stressed above, I refuse to use any inappropriate or insulting term like "in-active" in this context. I agree, regarding some particular cases mentioned yesterday when members never responded to anything from the beginning or more than two years, we need to find a solution or decertification in the worst case. In the given cases it becomes a question of our credibility: One the one hand, we are interested to organize as many members as possible (one member per country as a long-term goal), on the other hand we need to provide an appropriate In-reach with our members.
Kind regards, Wolf
Christoph Bruch wrote Thu, 16 Aug 2012 09:51
Dear All,
Humanistische Union / German Civil Liberties Union is one of the "non-active ALSes".
The fact that ALSes are not actively participating does not necessarily imply that they are not following the discussion at all.
I assume that the participation of ALSes is greatly dependent on the engagement of individual members of these organizations.
This engagement can vary considerably due to many factors.
This should be tolerated as long as low activity levels do not create considerable negative influences for the whole ALO.
The Problem of "non-active ALSes" should not be linked with the desire to possible enhance participation options for individuals.
Regards,
Christoph
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Im Auftrag von Roberto Gaetano Gesendet: Freitag, 10. August 2012 03:14 An: 'Discussion for At-Large Europe' Cc: 'Staff At Large' Betreff: [EURO-Discuss] R: Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
+1, but with a further comment. Since the beginning of ALAC, and even before, the issue has been how to foster contribution to the policy-making process. The ALSes have been seen as a way to have discussions on the local level, and bring the issues to a regional level. My personal opinion is that it is extremely likely that, if ALSes are not engaged in the regional policy development process, most probably they are not even discussing the issues locally. If this is the case, they are completely useless for the ICANN policy development process, so there will be no harm in cutting the dead branches. On the other hand, there has been an extremely lively discussion, many years ago, about individual contributions to policy development. My recollection is that EURALO was going to open a process to allow individual membership, in a form to be discussed. Where are we with this process? My worry is that, while we give a formal status to possibly inactive structures, we put psychological barreers to participation from individuals who could potentially contribute. Yes, I understand that I do have a potential conflict of interest, being an individual not belonging to any ALS raising this point, but look at it from a different point of view: I am a fan of *the power of contribution* rather than *the power of voting* (some might remember my approach to the GNSO review). And, ALS or not ALS, you can't stop me from expressing my opinion anyway... ;>) R.
-----Messaggio originale----- Da: euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:euro-discuss-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Per conto di Avri Doria Inviato: giovedì 9 agosto 2012 11:42 A: Discussion for At-Large Europe Cc: Staff At Large Oggetto: Re: [EURO-Discuss] Proposal procedure active- non-active ALSes
+1
On 9 Aug 2012, at 09:10, William Drake wrote:
Hi
As a Euralo board member and NCUC/SG rep on the GNSO maybe I can amplify. We do a "check in" procedure annually in the first place because we have a fairly large membership of over 200 organizational and individual members and have competitive elections to positions, e.g. Council seats, NCSG and NCUC chairs, excom. So it seems reasonable that the voting polity in a contested election should comprise only those able to must the energy to reply to an email and say yes I am still here and interested in participating. I suppose secondarily it could be of some use when we're trying to work out a policy position, i.e. if someone weighs in on a list discussion with a strong view that affects the ability to get consensus, it may be worth determining if they're an active member or not. Conversely, you don't have to hold up the consensus building process because you've not yet heard from phantoms.
We debated what was the appropriate threshold of activity to be classified as active. As Mathieu notes, this is complicated as given peoples' availability and the natural tendency to pick and choose items you're willing to devote energy to based on interests and bandwidth at a given time. So while in principle you could say that someone who has never participated in online discussions or shown up for a GA in a year should be deemed inactive, in practice this might be unfair.
An annual check in mail prior to an election cycle is a pretty low impact way of determining at least a baseline level of commitment. If a member has really fallen off the map, this is a way to know. And with number of members in Euralo, it wouldn't be difficult to execute. And it could increase the credibility of claims to represent xyz actors.
All in all, Rudi's suggestion seems sensible enough to me.
Best,
Bill
On Aug 8, 2012, at 5:21 PM, Mathieu Paapst wrote:
Hi Rudi,
I think you cannot assume that everyone participates on everything. For me it is also not clear how much activity is needed or desired. Do you want every ALS to participate in the monthly call or do you just want them to visit the yearly GA? And what will EURALO gain from putting ALSes on such a list other than making it easier to reach a quorum?
I am not necessarily against this measure, however it does not feel right if the board is not involved in these kind of decisions. Is there anything in our bylaws on this subject?
Kind regards,
Mathieu Paapst ISOC-NL
Rudi Vansnick schreef:
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
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Good evening: 1. ALAC exercises its mandate as representing the larger community of ALS and other At Large. ALAC is already a rather small, high level group whose credibility depends entirely on their accountability and responsiveness to At Large, at large. 2. Apparently there are busy ALS and less busy ALS in the ICANN context. (Bearing in mind that most ALS have other businesses to deal with at home.) But beware of imposing performance criteria on ALS and threatening dis-creditation. It would be better to use ICANN support to reactivate or re-prioritise the ALS in question. 3. Regarding the decision-making process and the 'quorum', few decisions need to come to a vote. It would be better to relativise the quorum: strong quorum for a few important issues; weaker quorum for routine decisions. CW On 21 Aug 2012, at 19:33, Carlton Samuels wrote:
Thanks for these inputs to our current debate, Christopher. I think they are useful for framing further discussions by avoiding formalist solutions. Any further feedbacks are highly welcome! Kind regards, Wolf Christopher Wilkinson wrote Tue, 21 Aug 2012 20:19
Good evening:
1. ALAC exercises its mandate as representing the larger community of ALS and other At Large. ALAC is already a rather small, high level group whose credibility depends entirely on their accountability and responsiveness to At Large, at large.
2. Apparently there are busy ALS and less busy ALS in the ICANN context. (Bearing in mind that most ALS have other businesses to deal with at home.) But beware of imposing performance criteria on ALS and threatening dis-creditation. It would be better to use ICANN support to reactivate or re-prioritise the ALS in question.
3. Regarding the decision-making process and the 'quorum', few decisions need to come to a vote. It would be better to relativise the quorum: strong quorum for a few important issues; weaker quorum for routine decisions.
CW
On 21 Aug 2012, at 19:33, Carlton Samuels wrote:
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Dear Wolf, Thanks for your reply and comments. I would like to make sure that there is no misunderstanding on one point, where I might not have been very clear.
From the sentences below:
(RG) In a nutshell, different organizations can be extremely active and extremely useful for different purposes related to the internet users, but if they do not participate in the policy development process they fail, IMHO, to satisfy the requirements for being an ALS. (Wolf) I don’t agree with your observation or conclusion that “ALS do not participate in the policy development process … (or) fail to satisfy the requirements …”. Please note that I never assumed or stated that ALSes do not participate in the development process, I only stated that, *if* they don't, *then* they fail to pass the test. I strongly believe that ALSes have, as a whole, done an excellent job, and I have stated that at the Mexico Summit, when I was still the Vice-Chair of the Board. However, the fact that most ALSes are active in dealing with the core business that ALSes have been built to do should not be used to hide the fact that there are other ALSes who do not participate in the ICANN policy development process, with the possible exception of periodically voting for representatives who take care of the policy development. The open question is whether this model works. Apparently we have a different opinion on what is the role of the ALSes: I am just giving my point of view, then it is up to the ALAC as a whole to decide what is the correct approach. The only thing that I ask is that this should be made clear. In other words, is it OK to have organizations who have some internet activities, but who do not engage in policy development? Either answer is fair, but it should be made clear where we stand. On the support/finance, I fully agree with you when you remind us that there has been in the past a sort of "handbrake" slowing the development of ALAC. However, this is the past, we have turned the page. We have obtained the Mexico Summit (my personal dissatisfaction is just that we have been unable to get it sooner, for instance in Paris) and we have obtained the voting Director - incidentally, I am personally proud of having been instrumental to this progress. Now we have to shift gear: we are no longer fighting for fair representation, we must make a plan and take commitments. What do we plan to bring to ICANN, how can we contribute to the overall purpose of ICANN? Once this stated, we can negotiate the resources we need to achieve this result. Until we have not clear in mind what we can do next, we do not have the necessary elements to answer your legitimate, but premature, question about "when the next At-Large Summit will take place". If we plan to build a strong "partnership" and show participation at the regional level, we can shoot for a summit in 2014. If, on the other hand, we give this impression of being not interested in interacting with the rest of the ICANN community, and continue having GAs somewhere else, my bet is that there will never ever again be another At Large summit (and obviously we can also forget about the second ALAC Director, that should still be an objective). Cheers, Roberto PS: I have cut the history, since I am on a slow and irregular connection
Dear Rudi and all, while catching up with my mails, I found your proposal regarding non-active ALSes what is supporting a necessary debate at EURALO -- Thanks! As we had related discussions at RALO Secretariats meetings (during ICANN conferences) since almost two years, I prepared an input paper for the Singapore meeting in summer 2011 outlining such a procedure what may finally lead to a decertification of a "non-responsive" ALS. At EURALO we identified about four ALSes at least which were certified years ago but never ever participated in anything on our regional level from the beginning or over some years. These "non-responsive" ALSes (or dead ducks) are: - Slovenian Consumers Association, - KEPKA, Greece, - Ynternet.org Institute, Switzerland. Another problem case is Terre des femmes, Germany, not responding any more (more than 18 months) and un-subscribed from the EURALO list. At the inter-RALO Secretariats level we agreed on some basics in this respect by allowing regional particularities on definitions and how to deal with such members. Regarding definitions, I repeatedly argued that the term "non-active" or "inactive" may be inappropriate for various of our members which are not very active at current EURALO matters but do a great job in their respective country or at the spot. And at various opportunities we found proof that most of them could be mobilized for votings on the Board Director (seat 15), ALS surveys and our Bylaw modification in spring last year. Following these considerations, I suggest to use the term "non-responsive over a longer period of time" (or more than 24 months) for our further discussions on the issue. Attached please find the input paper for Singapore what doesn't reflect the final state of our discussions and the terms I suggested. Thanks for your inputs and kind regards, Wolf Rudi Vansnick wrote Wed, 8 Aug 2012 02:48
Dear board members,
As we see many ALSes in EURALO not being quite active, in a long term not having responded to emails and other communications, we have to be honest and show respect for those having been active all along the road and as such allowing EURALO to still be recognized as part of the ALAC constituency. However, it is clear the number of ALSes is an important factor for ALAC to show interest and participation in the concept of the multi-stakeholder process of ICANN.
Therefor I propose we would act as does the NCUC by sending out an email requesting a response within a certain delay. If no response is received within the given timeframe, the ALS would be put on an "non-active" list. This would also allow us to have a correct quorum and election mechanism. This mechanism is a temporary procedure, not being voted on by the board, but as other decisions has also been taken without explicit approval of the board, I assume this one can also go through.
I'm willing to work out the process of this proposal with timeframe and procedural aspects in order to allow "non-active" ALSes getting back into the active list once they have shown enough interest in the work of EURALO and ALAC.
Just my eurocent idea
Rudi Vansnick EURALO board member
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participants (11)
-
"Kleinwächter, Wolfgang" -
Avri Doria -
Carlton Samuels -
Christoph Bruch -
Christopher Wilkinson -
Mathieu Paapst -
Oksana Prykhodko -
Roberto Gaetano -
Rudi Vansnick -
William Drake -
Wolf Ludwig