ICANN Fellowship and US Terrritories
Hi Janice I hope all is well In the past under Garth's leadership we have tried to reach out to the US territories for their involvement with ICANN. ie. NARALO In research we discovered that these US terrioritories live in a limbo situation with regards to their political status. On one hand they are US territory but the citizens do not have the right to vote. My concern is that they according to the UN research exist in a situation that places them as US property but they have income similar to least developed states https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/index.php?menu=1523 The list from UN Listing of Small Island Developing Nations American Samoa Federated State of Micronesia Guam Marianas Marshall Islands These five locations have unique Internet access issues. Among of which is some of the most expensive Internet service rates. My understanding is that these locations do not qualify for an application to the ICANN Fellowship program due to their US affiliation despite their low per capita income, Is this correct? Can you please provide us with clarification on this issue. What is the process of rectifying this situation. Happy to chat about this. ( not looking for a trip to the islands[?]) Thanks Glenn Glenn McKnight mcknight.glenn@gmail.com skype gmcknight twitter gmcknight .
Hi Glenn and all.. Over the past few years it has been my pleasure to work with you and others in At Large on these worthy initiatives towards broader engagement with communities that seem to be not as accessible to ICANN or ICANN accessible to them as other nations. In this particular case, as Save has already pointed out, each of the nations that you have noted are eligible for the Fellowship Program, as we use both the World Economic Bank and the SIDN UN listing and they all fall under that criteria. I have attached the most recent list of eligible countries for the Fellowship program; I check our application list against the World Bank and SIDN list prior to each Fellowship application launch to make sure a country has not been added or taken off the list before the new application goes live. Hope this is what you were looking for, although a trip to any of the islands would be grand :) janice From: Glenn Mcknight <mcknight.glenn@gmail.com> Date: Monday, 16 March 2015 09:51 To: NA Discuss <na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org>, Janice Douma Lange <janice.lange@icann.org>, Robert Hoggarth <robert.hoggarth@icann.org> Subject: ICANN Fellowship and US Terrritories Hi Janice I hope all is well In the past under Garth's leadership we have tried to reach out to the US territories for their involvement with ICANN. ie. NARALO In research we discovered that these US terrioritories live in a limbo situation with regards to their political status. On one hand they are US territory but the citizens do not have the right to vote. My concern is that they according to the UN research exist in a situation that places them as US property but they have income similar to least developed states https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/index.php?menu=1523 The list from UN Listing of Small Island Developing Nations American Samoa Federated State of Micronesia Guam Marianas Marshall Islands These five locations have unique Internet access issues. Among of which is some of the most expensive Internet service rates. My understanding is that these locations do not qualify for an application to the ICANN Fellowship program due to their US affiliation despite their low per capita income, Is this correct? Can you please provide us with clarification on this issue. What is the process of rectifying this situation. Happy to chat about this. ( not looking for a trip to the islands) Thanks Glenn Glenn McKnight mcknight.glenn@gmail.com skype gmcknight twitter gmcknight . Hi Glenn and all.. Over the past few years it has been my pleasure to work with you and others in At Large on these worthy initiatives towards broader engagement with communities that seem to be not as accessible to ICANN or ICANN accessible to them as other nations. In this particular case, as Save has already pointed out, each of the nations that you have noted are eligible for the Fellowship Program, as we use both the World Economic Bank and the SIDN UN listing and they all fall under that criteria. I have attached the most recent list of eligible countries for the Fellowship program; I check our application list against the World Bank and SIDN list prior to each Fellowship application launch to make sure a country has not been added or taken off the list before the new application goes live. Hope this is what you were looking for, although a trip to any of the islands would be grand :) janice From: Glenn Mcknight <[1]mcknight.glenn@gmail.com> Date: Monday, 16 March 2015 09:51 To: NA Discuss <[2]na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org>, Janice Douma Lange <[3]janice.lange@icann.org>, Robert Hoggarth <[4]robert.hoggarth@icann.org> Subject: ICANN Fellowship and US Terrritories Hi Janice I hope all is well In the past under Garth's leadership we have tried to reach out to the US territories for their involvement with ICANN. ie. NARALO In research we discovered that these US terrioritories live in a limbo situation with regards to their political status. On one hand they are US territory but the citizens do not have the right to vote. My concern is that they according to the UN research exist in a situation that places them as US property but they have income similar to least developed states [5]https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/index.php?menu=1523 The list from UN Listing of Small Island Developing Nations American Samoa Federated State of Micronesia Guam Marianas Marshall Islands These five locations have unique Internet access issues. Among of which is some of the most expensive Internet service rates. My understanding is that these locations do not qualify for an application to the ICANN Fellowship program due to their US affiliation despite their low per capita income, Is this correct? Can you please provide us with clarification on this issue. What is the process of rectifying this situation. Happy to chat about this. ( not looking for a trip to the islands [cid:330@goomoji.gmail] ) Thanks Glenn Glenn McKnight [6]mcknight.glenn@gmail.com skype gmcknight twitter gmcknight . References 1. mailto:mcknight.glenn@gmail.com 2. mailto:na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org 3. mailto:janice.lange@icann.org 4. mailto:robert.hoggarth@icann.org 5. https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/index.php?menu=1523 6. mailto:mcknight.glenn@gmail.com
With attachment From: Janice Douma Lange <janice.lange@icann.org> Date: Thursday, 19 March 2015 20:27 To: Glenn Mcknight <mcknight.glenn@gmail.com> Cc: save vocea <save.vocea@icann.org>, NA Discuss <na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org>, Robert Hoggarth <robert.hoggarth@icann.org> Subject: Re: ICANN Fellowship and US Terrritories Hi Glenn and all.. Over the past few years it has been my pleasure to work with you and others in At Large on these worthy initiatives towards broader engagement with communities that seem to be not as accessible to ICANN or ICANN accessible to them as other nations. In this particular case, as Save has already pointed out, each of the nations that you have noted are eligible for the Fellowship Program, as we use both the World Economic Bank and the SIDN UN listing and they all fall under that criteria. I have attached the most recent list of eligible countries for the Fellowship program; I check our application list against the World Bank and SIDN list prior to each Fellowship application launch to make sure a country has not been added or taken off the list before the new application goes live. Hope this is what you were looking for, although a trip to any of the islands would be grand :) janice From: Glenn Mcknight <mcknight.glenn@gmail.com> Date: Monday, 16 March 2015 09:51 To: NA Discuss <na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org>, Janice Douma Lange <janice.lange@icann.org>, Robert Hoggarth <robert.hoggarth@icann.org> Subject: ICANN Fellowship and US Terrritories Hi Janice I hope all is well In the past under Garth's leadership we have tried to reach out to the US territories for their involvement with ICANN. ie. NARALO In research we discovered that these US terrioritories live in a limbo situation with regards to their political status. On one hand they are US territory but the citizens do not have the right to vote. My concern is that they according to the UN research exist in a situation that places them as US property but they have income similar to least developed states https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/index.php?menu=1523 The list from UN Listing of Small Island Developing Nations American Samoa Federated State of Micronesia Guam Marianas Marshall Islands These five locations have unique Internet access issues. Among of which is some of the most expensive Internet service rates. My understanding is that these locations do not qualify for an application to the ICANN Fellowship program due to their US affiliation despite their low per capita income, Is this correct? Can you please provide us with clarification on this issue. What is the process of rectifying this situation. Happy to chat about this. ( not looking for a trip to the islands) Thanks Glenn Glenn McKnight mcknight.glenn@gmail.com skype gmcknight twitter gmcknight . With attachment From: Janice Douma Lange <[1]janice.lange@icann.org> Date: Thursday, 19 March 2015 20:27 To: Glenn Mcknight <[2]mcknight.glenn@gmail.com> Cc: save vocea <[3]save.vocea@icann.org>, NA Discuss <[4]na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org>, Robert Hoggarth <[5]robert.hoggarth@icann.org> Subject: Re: ICANN Fellowship and US Terrritories Hi Glenn and all.. Over the past few years it has been my pleasure to work with you and others in At Large on these worthy initiatives towards broader engagement with communities that seem to be not as accessible to ICANN or ICANN accessible to them as other nations. In this particular case, as Save has already pointed out, each of the nations that you have noted are eligible for the Fellowship Program, as we use both the World Economic Bank and the SIDN UN listing and they all fall under that criteria. I have attached the most recent list of eligible countries for the Fellowship program; I check our application list against the World Bank and SIDN list prior to each Fellowship application launch to make sure a country has not been added or taken off the list before the new application goes live. Hope this is what you were looking for, although a trip to any of the islands would be grand :) janice From: Glenn Mcknight <[6]mcknight.glenn@gmail.com> Date: Monday, 16 March 2015 09:51 To: NA Discuss <[7]na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org>, Janice Douma Lange <[8]janice.lange@icann.org>, Robert Hoggarth <[9]robert.hoggarth@icann.org> Subject: ICANN Fellowship and US Terrritories Hi Janice I hope all is well In the past under Garth's leadership we have tried to reach out to the US territories for their involvement with ICANN. ie. NARALO In research we discovered that these US terrioritories live in a limbo situation with regards to their political status. On one hand they are US territory but the citizens do not have the right to vote. My concern is that they according to the UN research exist in a situation that places them as US property but they have income similar to least developed states [10]https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/index.php?menu=1523 The list from UN Listing of Small Island Developing Nations American Samoa Federated State of Micronesia Guam Marianas Marshall Islands These five locations have unique Internet access issues. Among of which is some of the most expensive Internet service rates. My understanding is that these locations do not qualify for an application to the ICANN Fellowship program due to their US affiliation despite their low per capita income, Is this correct? Can you please provide us with clarification on this issue. What is the process of rectifying this situation. Happy to chat about this. ( not looking for a trip to the islands [cid:330@goomoji.gmail] ) Thanks Glenn Glenn McKnight [11]mcknight.glenn@gmail.com skype gmcknight twitter gmcknight . References 1. mailto:janice.lange@icann.org 2. mailto:mcknight.glenn@gmail.com 3. mailto:save.vocea@icann.org 4. mailto:na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org 5. mailto:robert.hoggarth@icann.org 6. mailto:mcknight.glenn@gmail.com 7. mailto:na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org 8. mailto:janice.lange@icann.org 9. mailto:robert.hoggarth@icann.org 10. https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/index.php?menu=1523 11. mailto:mcknight.glenn@gmail.com
Hi Janice. One difficulty of the spreadsheet is that ICANN's geographic slicing and dicing of the world is not the same as the UN's. According to ICANN's geographical regions, territories are grouped under the region of each territory's "mother country". (see http://meetings.icann.org/regions) So while the Virgin Islands are located in the Caribbean, according to ICANN the British Virgin Islands are in the European region and the US Virgin Islands are in North America. What this means is that within ICANN's regional groupings, American Samoa Federated State of Micronesia Guam Marianas Marshall Islands Palau are part of the North American Region and not Oceania or Asia/Pacific. That is, At-Large Structures that are located in these locations are, according to ICANN, under NARALO. This is a regional allocation which is, I believe, unique to ICANN, but needs to be maintained nonetheless. Thanks! On 19 March 2015 at 23:47, Janice Douma Lange <janice.lange@icann.org> wrote:
With attachment
From: Janice Douma Lange <[1]janice.lange@icann.org> Date: Thursday, 19 March 2015 20:27 To: Glenn Mcknight <[2]mcknight.glenn@gmail.com> Cc: save vocea <[3]save.vocea@icann.org>, NA Discuss <[4]na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org>, Robert Hoggarth <[5]robert.hoggarth@icann.org> Subject: Re: ICANN Fellowship and US Terrritories
Hi Glenn and all.. Over the past few years it has been my pleasure to work with you and others in At Large on these worthy initiatives towards broader engagement with communities that seem to be not as accessible to ICANN or ICANN accessible to them as other nations. In this particular case, as Save has already pointed out, each of the nations that you have noted are eligible for the Fellowship Program, as we use both the World Economic Bank and the SIDN UN listing and they all fall under that criteria. I have attached the most recent list of eligible countries for the Fellowship program; I check our application list against the World Bank and SIDN list prior to each Fellowship application launch to make sure a country has not been added or taken off the list before the new application goes live. Hope this is what you were looking for, although a trip to any of the islands would be grand :) janice From: Glenn Mcknight <[6]mcknight.glenn@gmail.com> Date: Monday, 16 March 2015 09:51 To: NA Discuss <[7]na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org>, Janice Douma Lange <[8]janice.lange@icann.org>, Robert Hoggarth <[9]robert.hoggarth@icann.org> Subject: ICANN Fellowship and US Terrritories Hi Janice I hope all is well In the past under Garth's leadership we have tried to reach out to the US territories for their involvement with ICANN. ie. NARALO In research we discovered that these US terrioritories live in a limbo situation with regards to their political status. On one hand they are US territory but the citizens do not have the right to vote. My concern is that they according to the UN research exist in a situation that places them as US property but they have income similar to least developed states [10]https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/index.php?menu=1523 The list from UN Listing of Small Island Developing Nations American Samoa Federated State of Micronesia Guam Marianas Marshall Islands These five locations have unique Internet access issues. Among of which is some of the most expensive Internet service rates. My understanding is that these locations do not qualify for an application to the ICANN Fellowship program due to their US affiliation despite their low per capita income, Is this correct? Can you please provide us with clarification on this issue. What is the process of rectifying this situation. Happy to chat about this. ( not looking for a trip to the islands [cid:330@goomoji.gmail] ) Thanks Glenn Glenn McKnight [11]mcknight.glenn@gmail.com skype gmcknight twitter gmcknight .
References
1. mailto:janice.lange@icann.org 2. mailto:mcknight.glenn@gmail.com 3. mailto:save.vocea@icann.org 4. mailto:na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org 5. mailto:robert.hoggarth@icann.org 6. mailto:mcknight.glenn@gmail.com 7. mailto:na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org 8. mailto:janice.lange@icann.org 9. mailto:robert.hoggarth@icann.org 10. https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/index.php?menu=1523 11. mailto:mcknight.glenn@gmail.com
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-- Evan Leibovitch Toronto Canada Em: evan at telly dot org Sk: evanleibovitch Tw: el56
Hi Glenn, Do you know of organizations in those territories who may wish to become accredited ALSes? You are right about their Fellowship Œineligibility'. There is not much we can do there. If these island states have indigenous population Internet users they may be able to participate in the proposed mentorship program. Just trying to brainstorm here... Best Christopher Mondini On 3/16/15, 12:51 PM, "Glenn McKnight" <mcknight.glenn@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Janice
I hope all is well
In the past under Garth's leadership we have tried to reach out to the US territories for their involvement with ICANN. ie. NARALO In research we discovered that these US terrioritories live in a limbo situation with regards to their political status. On one hand they are US territory but the citizens do not have the right to vote. My concern is that they according to the UN research exist in a situation that places them as US property but they have income similar to least developed states
https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/index.php?menu=1523
The list from UN Listing of Small Island Developing Nations
American Samoa Federated State of Micronesia Guam Marianas Marshall Islands
These five locations have unique Internet access issues. Among of which is some of the most expensive Internet service rates.
My understanding is that these locations do not qualify for an application to the ICANN Fellowship program due to their US affiliation despite their low per capita income, Is this correct?
Can you please provide us with clarification on this issue. What is the process of rectifying this situation.
Happy to chat about this. ( not looking for a trip to the islands[?])
Thanks Glenn
Glenn McKnight mcknight.glenn@gmail.com skype gmcknight twitter gmcknight .
On 20 March 2015 at 13:05, Chris Mondini <chris.mondini@icann.org> wrote: You are right about their Fellowship Œineligibility'. There is not much we
can do there.
Um ... why not? Regardless if the obstacle is policy *or* implementation, ALAC is in a position to advocate -- directly to the Board if necessary -- to right an obvious wrong. Especially if you agree with the benefit of changing Fellowship eligibility for these territories, Chris, we can work together to fix this. - Evan
participants (4)
-
Chris Mondini -
Evan Leibovitch -
Glenn McKnight -
Janice Douma Lange