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March 7, 2000
Markle Foundation Announces Initiative to Enable
Non-Profit Groups to More Fully Participate in Internet Governance
Markle and Ford Foundation grants will help
non-profit groups attend international ICANN meetings through ICANN Travel Support Project
Grant is part of Markle's Internet Governance Project - designed to make nontraditional
policymaking groups more accountable
New York, NY - The Markle Foundation is undertaking an initiative to enable
non-profit groups to more fully participate in Internet governance by making it
easier for them to attend international meetings of ICANN, the Internet's first
international oversight body, it was announced today by Zoë Baird, Markle's President.
The announcement was made to coincide with ICANN's quarterly meeting in Cairo, Egypt.
Under the initiative - part of Markle's Internet Governance Project (IGP) -the Markle
Foundation and The Ford Foundation will each make a seventy-five thousand dollar grant for
the ICANN Travel Support Program to The Salzburg Seminar, a renowned institution of
international education. By funding non-profit groups' travel arrangements to - and
accommodations at - ICANN meetings, the ICANN Travel Support Project will help provide
a broader range of groups the chance to attend meetings of the Internet oversight body.
Zoë Baird said, "The ICANN Travel Support Project is an important step toward
ensuring that the public voice can help shape the governance of the Internet. With
this grant, we will reduce or eliminate cost as a barrier to a number of non-profit,
educational, research and public-interest organizations that should be able to attend
ICANN's international meetings to network, contribute their ideas about how Internet
governance should develop, and help shape Internet policymaking."
Olin Robison, President of the Salzburg Seminar, said, "For over fifty
years, the Salzburg Seminar has provided opportunities for young leaders to meet
and learn. As an international educational organization we are well aware of the
financial difficulties many non-profit leaders face in supporting their activities.
The Seminar is therefore pleased to announce the ICANN Travel Support Project that
will allow selected non-profit leaders to attend ICANN's international meetings. We
believe their voices, and those they represent, need to be heard at ICANN's
policymaking sessions. Working with the Markle and Ford Foundations, this Project
is one step towards making ICANN's meetings more inclusive of the global Internet
community."
On April 1, 2000 The Salzburg Seminar's ICANN Travel Support Project will
begin to recruit and screen potential participants. Organizations selected for
participation will be funded for the costs of travel to ICANN meetings and their
accommodations. For more information, interested individuals and organizations
should visit www.Salzburgseminar.org
About Markle's Internet Governance Project
Markle's Internet Governance Project is designed to promote the public
interest in nontraditional, international venues where decisions are increasingly
made and standards are set that affect the Internet.
At ICANN's most recent meeting, in Los Angeles in November, the Markle
Foundation announced several major initiatives designed to make ICANN, the
Internet's first international oversight body, more accountable to all users
of the Internet. This included a grant to enable ICANN to hire staff, conduct
outreach (including easy-to-understand educational materials), create technical
mechanisms for global voting, translate key documents into several major languages
for the benefit of all potential ICANN members worldwide, and initiate the At-large
voting process. Markle also enlisted the support of, and is providing funds for
efforts by, The Carter Center, The Center for Democracy and Technology, the
Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School, Common Cause, and
the American Library Association to help establish the election process, to
reach out to Internet users, and to monitor the elections. These efforts are
designed to encourage the greatest participation by the broadest geographic base
of individuals and non-commercial users.
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is a
non-profit, international corporation formed in September 1998 to oversee a
select set of Internet technical management functions currently managed by the
U.S. Government, or by its contractors and volunteers. Specifically, ICANN is
assuming responsibility for coordinating the management of the domain name
system (DNS), and other important features of the Internet.
About the Salzburg Seminar
The Salzburg Seminar was founded on the ideal that open discussion among
individuals helps build the bridges of communication and cooperation for the
global community. The Seminar was begun in 1947 by three students at Harvard
University as a means of bringing together young Europeans and Americans from
countries recently at war to engage in intellectual dialogue. Over the years,
the Seminar has evolved and expanded to become a renowned institution of
international education. More than 20,000 Fellows from more than 150 countries
have attended sessions exploring political, social, and cultural issues of global
interest. Our mission is to provide opportunities for the next generation of
leaders to meet with each other for the exchange of opinions and ideas. Our goal
is to bring together in a productive way the worlds of scholarship, public policy,
and practice. The Seminar conducts sessions at Schloss Leopoldskron, an eighteenth
century palace in Salzburg, Austria. It is an American not-for-profit educational
organization with administrative headquarters in Middlebury, Vermont.
About the Markle Foundation
Emerging communications media and information technology create unprecedented
opportunity to improve people's lives. The Markle Foundation works to realize this
potential and to promote the development of communications industries that address
public needs.
Some of the most promising areas for Markle's work are in the following programs:
Public Engagement through Interactive Technologies, Policy for a Networked
Society, Interactive Media for Children, and Information Technologies for Better
Health. To capture opportunities in our rapidly changing world that fall outside
these priorities, Markle also maintains an Opportunity Fund.
Markle pursues its goals through a range of activities including analysis,
research, public information and the development of innovative media products and
services. The foundation creates and operates many of its own projects-using not
only grants but also investments and strategic alliances with non-profits and
businesses.
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