What is making this less clear cut is that the applicant seems not a formally registered body, but a collaborative academic project with multiple institutional sponsors/partners. I'm familar with its infrastructure because I work for one of those myself. The two core institutions, the administrative functions and the communications channels are North America based. That's enough for me to support it here. Again, this is not an exact fit for the kind of ALSs envisioned, but I see that as more opportunity than obstacle. - Evan On 26 November 2012 09:41, Garth Bruen at Knujon.com <gbruen@knujon.com>wrote:
Thanks Evan. My ALS has members from all of the world but we are located and registered in the U.S.
When I applied to be an ALS I was asked which region I was going to represent.
If this group applied in multiple regions I think it might be a problem, here I'm not sure there is one.
------------------------------**-------------------- From: "Evan Leibovitch" <evan@telly.org> Sent: Monday, November 26, 2012 8:58 AM To: "Bob Bruen" <bruen@coldrain.net> Cc: "Houle Louis" <Louis.Houle@oricom.ca>; "NA Discuss" < na-discuss@atlarge-lists.**icann.org <na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org>>
Subject: Re: [NA-Discuss] Fw: Due Diligence complete- Regional Advice requested ALS applicant "(170) University Community Partnership for Social Action Research"
I'm personally concerned about groups "falling through the cracks", being
unable to find any place within At-Large because our various sets of categorization don't suit them. I see this now happening in the GNSO, where an association of cyber-cafés is looking for an appropriate constituency and is being told "you can't get there from here" (everyone is saying that they ought to be accommodated -- somewhere else).
If a potential ALS has a presence in multiple regions, there is IMO nothing wrong with it applying in any of those regions, so long as it understands that it must pick only one. When it comes to conflicted individuals -- who might be a citizen of one region but live or work in more than one -- At-Large has IMO traditionally erred on the side of inclusion and simply said "pick any of the ones that could apply to you, but pick only one."
I believe there are regulations prohibiting a single ALS from being in more than one region at once. And I don't believe that this group has applied for more than one region. This means one of two outcomes, both of which should be accepted:
- They have a predominance of presence in our region
- They have participation in multiple regions, yet choose ours as the
one they want to belong to
It may be reasonable, as part of the due diligence, to ask the applicant for a rough geographical breakdown of its membership if that is not provided. And the applicant must be reminded that they can only participate in a single region. Given that, I see no real cause for opposition.
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