Third Accountability and Transparency Review

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The Third Accountability and Transparency Review (ATRT3) was initiated in January 2017.[1] As of May 2021, the review is in the plan implementation phase.[1]

Background

Purpose and Origin of Specific Reviews

The Affirmation of Commitments, an agreement between ICANN and the United States Department of Commerce, establishes ICANN's obligations to perform its duties with specific commitments in mind. All of the commitments bear on public and consumer trust of the organization. ICANN is to perform its functions in a manner that:

  • ensures accountability and transparency of decision-making;
  • preserves the security, stability, and resiliency of the DNS;
  • promotes competition, consumer trust, and consumer choice; and
  • enables access to registration data.

It is also charged to periodically review and assess its performance through the lens of each of the above commitments.[2]

ICANN's board enshrined these commitments (and the associated reviews) in its Bylaws in Article 1 (Mission, Commitments, and Core Values)[3] and in Article 4 (Accountability and Review).[4] Article 4.6 deals with "Specific Reviews," each of which are tied to one of the commitments in the Affirmation of Commitments.[5]

The Organizational Effectiveness Committee of the board oversees the conduct of specific reviews.[6] The ATRT is one such specific review.

Delays in Launching Substantive Work

The call for volunteers for ATRT3 was initially put out in January, 2017. It was subsequently extended in April 2017. At the time of extension, the Board noted that multiple factors were impacting the timing of ATRT3. Because of the timing of ATRT2, the ICANN Bylaws required that the review be launched not later than October 2017. Meanwhile, the Cross Community Working Group on ICANN Accountability (CCWG-Accountability) notified that Board in 2016 that its work was overlapping substantially with the scope of ATRT reviews. The CCWG-Accountability co-chairs raised the possibility of crafting a narrow scope for ATRT3, to avoid duplication of work.[7] At the same time, the IANA Transition was just wrapping up, and many voices within the ICANN community were speaking up about volunteer fatigue.[8] As a result, in 2018 the Board submitted three separate papers for public comment: "Short-Term options to Adjust the Timeline for Specific Reviews,"[9] "Long-Term Options to Adjust the Timeline of Reviews,"[10] and a follow-up "Next Steps on Reviews" document.[11]

In October 2018, the board approved a resolution to instruct ATRT3 to begin work, encouraging them to promptly submit their work plan and begin substantive work in January 2019. It also appointed Maarten Botterman to the ATRT3 team.[8]

Review Team

The ATRT3 review team held its first in-person meeting in April 2019 to set the scope of the review and establish its work plan.[12] Unlike previous ATRT reviews, the review team did not identify a need for an independent expert to consult. Instead, they identified four top-level issues for the review team's work parties to address:

  1. Board governance and community interaction;
  2. GAC interaction with the board and the broader community;
  3. Review processes - how ICANN receives public input, as well as a review of implementation of recommendations from ATRT2;
  4. The impact of ICANN's decision-making process as it relates to the broader Internet community, and the effectiveness of ICANN's policy development process in fostering cross community participation.[12]

Methodology

The ATRT3 team utilized a number of fact-finding methods in order to gain a picture of the current state of ICANN's accountability and transparency initiatives:

  • Review and assessment of ATRT2 implementation;
  • Within each topic area, the work parties devised questions for a survey that was issued to the ICANN community, and a survey specifically aimed at ICANN structure (ACs, SOs, GNSO constituencies, and [[Regional At-Large Organization|RALOs) participation;
  • Conducted interviews at ICANN 65 and ICANN 66, as well as public sessions at ICANN 66;
  • Received briefings from various groups, including ICANN org's Public Participation team and the NomCom2 implementation working group;
  • Reviewed the ICANN Accountability Indicators in detail;
  • Reviewed many ICANN documents; and
  • Requested and received numerous clarifications and details from ICANN org and staff[13]

The survey received 88 individual responses (with 50 of those responsed completing the majority of the survey) and responses from 14 of the 17 specifically invited ICANN groups.[13]

ICANN 66 Sessions

ATRT3's sessions at ICANN 66 took place in parallel with wider community investigation of improvements for Article 4 reviews. ICANN staff facilitated a conversation around enhancing the effectiveness of review recommendations and their implementation,[14] where Cheryl Langdon-Orr and Pat Kane from the ATRT3 review team presented early impressions of the team in relation to review process.[15] At its meeting with the Board Caucus, the review team presented its findings, suggestions, and recommendations to date.Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag while suggestions may not necessarily meet this standard.5 The ATRT3 does not consider suggestions to be less important than recommendations. The determination if an item is a suggestion or a recommendation will be finalized in ATRT3’s final report.[13]

The report's preamble highlighted five topics that it considered to be high priority for both community discussion and feedback, and implementation of recommendations or suggestions.

  1. ATRT2 Implementation Issues - A number of suggestions specifically address the failure to implement recommendations from ATRT2. In addition, the report recommends that in-progress specific reviews appoint and empower implementation shepherds as recommended by the Operating Standards for Specific Reviews.[16] In addition, the report recommends ensuring that implentation is actively tracked on the ICANN website, and that if any changes are made to the process of tracking and reporting implementation, that legacy web pages and other resources are updated to reflect the changes and provide the location of the new processes.[13]
  2. Prioritization of Work - The ATRT3 team took note of a variety of parallel efforts to improve prioritization and rationalization of work, and concluded that "only a community-led process can legitimately develop a system for prioritizing the implementation of reviews, CWG, and CCWG recommendations." The draft report provided suggestions regarding the creation of a development team that would create a prioritization process, as well as baseline requirements for that process.[13]
  3. Article 4 Reviews - Noting that it is best to approach reformation of the review process "holistically," the draft report provided two possible options for addressing the myriad issues relating to specific and organzational reviews:
    1. Maintain the current set of specific and organizational reviews in combination with a new oversight mechanism to manage reviews and the implementation of recommendations. The new mechanism should be housed in an Independent Accountability Office (similar to the ICANN Ombudsman), which would have responsibility for SO/AC accountability as well as the job of coordinating timing of reviews and the implementation of recommendations; or
    2. Maintain the spirit of Article 4.4 organizational reviews, but conduct them as three- to five-day leadership workshops focused on self-assessment in a context of a continuous improvement processes. The workshops would occur at least once every three years, or more often as desired by each organization subject to Article 4.4 review. Outcomes and recommendations from these workshops would be publically posted, and implementation would be tracked and reported on as well. The reports from these workshop review would feed into a new holistic organizational review of all SOs, ACs, and the NomCom. The holistic review would take place every seven years and have a maximum duration of twelve to eighteen months. The time between holistic reviews allows at least two cycles of self-assessment and improvement for each organization, as well as sufficient time to implement recommendations from the holistic review. For the Article 4.6 reviews, consolidate ATRT and the "accountability and transparency" directives of the CCT and RDS reviews into a single Accountability and Transparency review, to be conducted every seven years with a maximum duration of twelve to eighteen months. Conduct the SSR review as a three- to five-day workshop, or maintain the current review process for SSR reviews.
  4. Public comment - Expand public comment activities to not only seek general input on entire documents. Clearly identify the "intended audience" for a public comment proceeding ("general community, technical community, legal experts, etc."), so that anyone may respond but specific communities are called upon to respond. Provide a summary of key questions in plain language, and include any responses to these key questions in the staff report on the public comment proceeding. Where appropriate and feasible, provide translations of a summary of the document, as well as key questions, and accept responses from speakers of official ICANN languages.
  5. Accountability Indicators - Foster public awareness of the ICANN Accountability Indicators, including presentation of the indicators at an ICANN Meeting. The draft report "strongly suggest[ed]" that ICANN "rapidly undertake a serious review of its Accountability Indicators" to ensure: that they met their stated objectives; that they provided useful data; that they provided data that could inform a decision maker; and that the data for each indicator is current and up to date.

Public Comment on the Draft Report

The draft report received comments from many ICANN bodies, as well as the board.[17] The review team analyzed and incorporated the comments into the final version of its report, which was delivered to the board in May 2020.[18]

The final report generated substantial dissenting opinions in the public comment period.[19] In particular, the recommendations to suspend certain specific reviews until after the next cycle of the ATRT review was met with strong opposition from some constituencies.[19] Following the public comment period, in November 2020, the ICANN Board approved a set of recommendations from the final report, "subject to prioritization."[20][21]

Implementation

ATRT3 is, as of July 2021, in the implementation phase.[1]

Impact on Organizational Reviews

In June 2021, the board agreed to defer GNSO3, in large part because of the recommendations of the ATRT3 final report. The board also effectively place a hold on all pending organizational reviews until such time as the ATRT3 recommendations were integrated into an implementation plan:

Resolved,...the Board determines that it is not feasible to initiate the GNSO3 Review at this time. The Board is deferring the initiation of the GNSO3 Review until such time as the Board, community and org better understand the impact of the ATRT3 Recommendations on the next Organizational Review cycle, as well as in consideration of the current community workload. Resolved,...the Board directs the ICANN President and CEO, or his designee, to develop a comprehensive plan for the timing and conduct of the next Organizational Review cycle, taking into consideration the timing of the implementation of the ATRT3 recommendations. This plan should be developed in consultation with the ICANN community, and ICANN org shall provide periodic updates to the Board on progress towards such plan.[22]

References