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Global Information Society Watch 2011

  Internet rights and democratisation

  Focus on freedom of expression and association online

  Association for Progressive Communications (APC)

  and Humanist Institute for Cooperation with Developing Countries (Hivos)

  Global Information Society Watch

  2011

  This edition of Global Information Society Watch is dedicated

  to the people of the Arab revolutions whose courage

  in the face of violence and repression reminded the world

  that people working together for change have the power

  to claim the rights they are entitled to.

  Global Information Society Watch 2011

  Steering committee

  Anriette Esterhuysen (APC)

  Loe Schout (Hivos)

  Coordinating committee

  Karen Banks (APC)

  Monique Doppert (Hivos)

  Karen Higgs (APC)

  Marjan Besuijen (Hivos)

  Joy Liddicoat (APC)

  Pablo Accuosto (APC)

  Valeria Betancourt (APC)

  Project coordinator

  Karen Banks

  Editor

  Alan Finlay

  Assistant editor

  Lori Nordstrom

  Publication production

  Karen Higgs, Analía Lavin and Flavia Fascendini

  Graphic design

  monocromo

  [email protected]

  Phone: +598 2 400 1685

  Cover illustration

  Matías Bervejillo

  Proofreading

  Stephanie Biscomb, Valerie Dee and Lori Nordstrom

  Financial partners

  Humanist Institute for Cooperation with Developing Countries (Hivos)

  Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida)

  The views expressed in this publication are those of the individual authors and not necessarily those of APC or Hivos

  Global Information Society Watch

  Published by APC and Hivos

  South Africa

  2011

  Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Licence

 

  Some rights reserved.

  ISSN: 2225-4625

  APC-201111-CIPP-R-EN-PDF-0105

  ISBN: 978-92-95096-14-1

  APC and Hivos would like to thank the Swedish International Cooperation Agency (Sida) for its support for Global Information Society Watch 2011.

  Preface

  Unlike any other medium, the internet enables individuals to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds instantaneously and inexpensively across national borders. Unlike any other technological development, it has created an interactive form of communication, which not only allows you to send information in one direction, but also to send information in many directions and receive an immediate response. The internet vastly increases the capacity of individuals to enjoy their right to freedom of opinion and expression, including access to information, which facilitates the exercise of other human rights, such as the right to education and research, the right to freedom of association and assembly, and the right to development and to protect the environment. The internet boosts economic, social and political development, and contributes to the progress of humankind as a whole; but it is especially an instrument that strengthens democracy by facilitating citizen participation and transparency. The internet is a “plaza pública” – a public place where we can all participate.

  The past year has been a difficult time globally: whether the aftermath of the tsunami in Japan, unsteady global markets, post-election riots in Nigeria, civil war in Libya and a military clampdown in Syria. But there have been positive, and equally challenging, developments in countries such as Tunisia and Egypt. Throughout the year people around the world have increasingly used the internet to build support for human rights and social movements. This edition of Global Information Society Watch (GISWatch) offers timely commentary on the future of the internet as an open and shared platform that everyone has the right to access – to access content and to have access to connectivity and infrastructure.

  Through the lens of freedom of expression, freedom of association and democracy, the thematic reports included here go to the heart of the debates that will shape the future of the internet and its impact on human rights. They offer, amongst other things, an analysis of how human rights are framed in the context of the internet, the progressive use of criminal law to intimidate or censor the use of the internet, the difficult role of intermediaries facing increasing pressure to control content, and the importance of the internet to workers in the support of global rights in the workplace. Some call for a change of perspective, as in the report on cyber security, where the necessity of civil society developing a security advocacy strategy for the internet is argued. Without it, the levels of systems and controls, whether emanating from government or military superpowers, threaten to overwhelm what has over the years become the vanguard of freedom of expression and offered new forms of free association between people across the globe.

  Many of these issues are pulled sharply into focus at the country level in the country reports that follow the thematic considerations. Each of these country reports takes a particular “story” or event that illustrates the role of the internet in social rights and civil resistance – whether positive or negative, or both. Amongst other things, they document torture in Indonesia, candlelight vigils in South Korea, internet activism against forgetting human rights atrocities in Peru, and the rights of prisoners accessing the internet in Argentina. While the function and role of the internet in society remains debated, and necessarily so, in many contexts these stories show that to limit it unfairly will have a harmful impact on the rights of people. These stories show that the internet has become pivotal in actions aimed at the protection of human rights.

  GISWatch makes a valuable contribution to dialogue on freedom of expression, freedom of association and democratisation and seeks to inspire and support collaborative approaches.

  Frank La Rue united nations special rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression

  Introduction

  Jillian C. York

  Electronic Frontier Foundation

  eff.org