geert lovink on Tue, 15 Jul 2003 06:38:05 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Plans for a World Forum on Communication Rights |
(This could be of interest for nettimers. The Forum Organizing Group has not yet done a lot so there's still a lot of room left to shape it. If you want to join, please contact one of the organizers. /geert) World Forum on Communication Rights This introduces a proposal to hold a one-day World Forum on Communication Rights alongside the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) on December 11 2003 in Geneva, Switzerland. The CRIS campaign (Communication Rights in the Information Society: www.crisinfo.org) is launching the initiative as a collaborative event, and is actively building a broader partnership. 1. The Rationale The purpose of the Forum is specific. In the context of human rights in general, it focuses on information and communication rights issues that surround the emergence of an information society. These are not limited to concerns regarding the 'digital divide' and access to ICTs; but draw on a more profound understanding of the role of information and communication in society and current dynamics and trends. They encompass areas such as the public domain and intellectual property rights, the public sphere and media and communication, and the commercialisation and closure of the Internet. The WSIS itself is constrained in the manner and depth to which such issues can be addressed. Some countries and corporate interests have already demonstrated their determination to prevent certain matters from reaching the agenda. And many issues are the domain of existing international organisations and entities, and these are reluctant to cede territory to the WSIS. Yet it is essential that communication rights in the information society be considered as a coherent, and interrelated, set of concerns. Indeed, in all likelihood it is the extent to which rights are implanted and firmly fixed within the process of creating an information society that will determine which kind of information society emerges, how the benefits will be realised, and who will reap them. The event comprises a forum to explore these and to do something about them. It traces its lineage (as does the CRIS campaign itself) not through the WSIS process per se, but in the mobilisation of civil society in recent years around global human rights, communication and development issues. 2. Goals The outcomes of the Forum are expected to be threefold: A. A Portrayal of Communication Rights Globally: To explore and define the dimensions of information and communication rights that must underpin any claim of an information society to enrich the lives of all people, by portraying the denial of these rights in different contexts using concrete examples and analyses, and demonstrating novel examples of such rights being secured. B. A 'Declaration on Communication Rights in the Information Society': To formulate together and agree a succinct statement, in comprehensible language, that: Notes existing human rights relating to information and communication; Sets down the conditions and environment necessary for people to exercise these, in practice; Explores obstacles to achieving such an environment, identifying priority areas for intervention. C. A Set of Actions: To engage multi-partner participation in a set of voluntary collaborative actions to implement such rights in a manner meaningful to people in their everyday lives, and to define appropriate follow-up. These will comprise targeted actions, each contributing to communication rights in the context of the information society, and that in practice are beyond the scope of the WSIS Summit. They might include for instance alternatives to intellectual property rights, promotion of open source software, innovation in governance and regulation, grass-roots technologies, or new fund-raising mechanisms. 3. Modalities The Forum is an open event. It welcomes those among civil society, activists, NGOs, agencies, governments, intergovernmental organisations and the private sector who accept the need to address communication rights in the information society and who want to work together to achieve these goals. It will have a duration of one day, and will take place alongside the first WSIS Summit in December 2003 in Palexpo. The provisional date is December the 11th, mid way through the three day Summit. 4. Link to Other Events Links will be established with other events surrounding the WSIS, held within Palexpo as well as externally bringing together grass-roots and community activists and organisations. An important aspect of the Forum will be to build bridges between these and others within the WSIS as a whole seeking to cooperate on rights issues, and to bring forward radical but realistic proposals for action. CRIS will also work with others to organise workshops, seminars or other events around the WSIS Summit, aimed at feeding into the Forum, and may establish live interactive links globally. Preparations for all three objectives will be extensive and are underway. A. The portrayal of the situation and needs of communication rights in different regions will be primed through a series of national and regional Workshops and other events. Using a common methodology, the aim is to explore the realities for communities in different regions in terms of rights or the absence of them, the impact on their capacity to engage effectively with the information society, and innovative solutions from communities and activists. Such workshops are currently being discussed with partners, and others are being sought. B. A first draft of the Declaration on Communication Rights will be prepared by the Forum Organising Group by July 2003. It will then be open to a period of discussion and debate, electronically, at civil society and other events and through targeted consultations. The final text agreed for the Forum will thereafter seek ongoing endorsement from a wide range of actors. This Declaration is not intended as a formal or legal statement, but as a basic set of agreed principles that can form a platform for organisation and mobilisation. C. The set of concrete actions initiated at the Forum need careful and extensive preparation and coordination with others. A first step is to identify potential projects, each to be organised as collaborations, going beyond the current status quo in conventional information society thought, that contribute to information and communication rights, and yet are realistic in terms of resources and outcomes. We are convinced that huge financial investment is not a prerequisite of progress, if the will is there to innovate in regulation, governance and new funding mechanisms. Donor agencies, government and indeed private sector are welcome in such actions. Preparations will be pursued alongside existing civil society events during the year, WSIS PrepCom 3, and in dedicated meetings, encounters and communications, thus grounding it within ongoing civil society processes and discourse. CRIS is ready to play its part in organising the event, and is actively seeking collaborators amongst NGOs and civil society, intergovernmental and other agencies, governments and private sector. CRIS is approaching various parties to form a Forum Organising Group. Should you wish to know more please contact: Seán Ó Siochrú sean@nexus.ie Myriam Horngren: mh@wacc.org.uk -- http://www.worldsummit2003.de/en/web/386.htm A first meeting for planning the World Forum on Communication Rights (WFCR) took place on 10 June in London. The attendees discussed a draft concept by Sean O´Siochru from the CRIS campaign. Issues such as media concentration and intellectual property rights are to be adressed, aiming to come to a more comprehensive definition of the right to communicate. The objective is thus to fill the vaccuum of issues which the governmental declarations of the World Summit of Information Society leave out. The first WFCR will be taking place on December 11th at Palexpo, Geneve, half way through the World Summit on Information Society. It is supposed to be a spectacle for press and civil society. But the WFCR will also go beyond WSIS. It will monitor the further development of Communication rights on a regular basis. Further ocasions for this could be WTO and WSF-Meetings in 2004 as well as the Tunis WSIS in 2005. Yet the Programme is only starting to evolve. As a framework, three main approaches have been discussed, looking at the present situation, the principles, and the future tasks of communication rights. Working groups on each thread will be formed during the next weeks as well as a "fog" (a "forum organising group"), which hopefully - as opposed to its title - will bring some light and transparency into the coordination process. Sean's concept paper has already proposed a title for the first panel: "Commuication rights, communication wrongs". A working group will be collecting examples of good and malpractise of communication. A call for inputs will be released soon. Theoretical work will be presented on the second panel. A declaration on Communication Rights will give a definition of a right to communicate in an information society. Work on the text will start soon. The working group on this is encouraged to merge the statements developed by various groups in the preparation process of WSIS. Authors of these statements are invited to participate. The final panel will proceed to more practical agenda setting. The necessary steps to improve communication rights will be dicussed here. This shall be demonstrating the possibilities of an alternative approach towards the information society taking into account communication rights. Jan Schallaböck, London, 10 June 2003. See also: http://www.worldwidewiki.net/wiki/SsrcWorknotes # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net