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Pirate Parties International

Pirate Parties International (PPI) is an international non-profit and non-governmental organization with headquarters in Brussels, Belgium.[1] Formed in 2010, it serves as a worldwide organization for Pirate Parties, currently representing 39 members from 36 countries across Europe, the Americas, Asia, Africa and Australasia. The Pirate Parties are political incarnations of the freedom of expression movement, trying to achieve their goals by the means of the established political system rather than just through activism. In 2017 PPI had been granted special consultative status to the United Nations Economic and Social Council.[2]

Pirate Parties International
AbbreviationPPI
Formation18 April 2010 (2010-04-18)
TypeInternational nongovernmental organisation
Legal statusAssociation
PurposePolitical
HeadquartersBrussels, Belgium
Membership
Pirate parties and affiliated associations
Chairperson
Grégory Engels
Vice-Chairperson
Keith L. Goldstein
General Secretary
TBD
Treasurer
TBD
Main organ
General Assembly
Websitewww.pp-international.net
  Elected in EU Parliament
  Elected nationally
  Elected locally
  Registered for elections
  Registered in some states
  Unregistered but active
  Status unknown
  Ordinary members
  Observer members

Aims edit

The PPI statutes[3] give its purposes as:

to help establish, to support and promote, and to maintain communication and co-operation between pirate parties around the world.

The PPI advocate on the international level for the promotion of the goals. Its members share such as protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the digital age, consumer and authors rights-oriented reform of copyright and related rights, support of information privacy, transparency, and free access to information.

The name "Pirates" itself is a reappropriation of the title that was given to internet users by the representatives of the music and film industry and does not refer to any illegal activity.

History edit

The first Pirate Party was the Swedish Piratpartiet, founded on 1 January 2006. Other parties and groups were formed in Austria, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland, and Spain. In 2007, representatives of these parties met in Vienna, Austria to form an alliance and plan for the 2009 European Parliament elections.[4] Further conferences were held in 2008 in Berlin and Uppsala, the latter leading to the "Uppsala Declaration" of a basic platform for the elections.[5]

In 2009, the original Pirate Party won 7.1% of the vote[6] in Sweden's European Parliament elections and won two of Sweden's twenty MEP seats, inspired by a surge in membership following the trial and conviction of three members of the ideologically aligned Pirate Bay a year earlier.[7]

On 18 April 2010, the Pirate Parties International was formally founded in Brussels at the PPI Conference from April 16 to 18.[1]

Uppsala Declaration edit

At the 2009 conference of Pirate Parties International in Uppsala (Sweden), European Pirate parties agreed on a common declaration of the parties' goals for the upcoming election of the European Parliament.[8][9] Central issues of the declaration are:

  • reform of copyright, exemption of non-commercial activity from copyright regulation, reduction of the duration of copyright protections; banning of DRM technologies, opposition to media or hardware levies;
  • reform of patent law, particularly stating that patents on life (including patents on seeds and genes) and software should not be allowed;
  • strengthening civil rights, transparent government, speedy and fair trial, freedom of speech, and expansion of the right to anonymity in communication.

Prague Declaration edit

At the conference of Pirate Parties International in Prague (Czech Republic) in 2012, European Pirate parties agreed to run in the elections to the European Parliament in the year 2014 with a common program as well as establish a European political party (European Pirate Party, PPEU). The declaration[10] has been followed by conferences in Potsdam and Barcelona to work on the structure of the legal body to come and the statutes for it.

Member Parties edit

As of July 2 2022, PPI has the following 31[11] Ordinary members with the voting power of 28 (parties sharing territory split the vote among themselves):

Africa edit

  1.   Pirate Party of Tunisia

Asia and the Pacific edit

  1.   Pirate Party of New Zealand (1/2 vote; vote shared with IP New Zealand)
  2.   Internet Party New Zealand (1/2 vote; vote shared with PP New Zealand)

Americas edit

  1.   Pirate Party of Brazil
  2.   Pirate Party of Chile
  3.   United States Pirate Party
  4.   Pirate Party of Venezuela

Europe edit

  1.   Pirate Party of Belgium
  2.   Pirate Party of Catalonia
  3.   Czech Pirate Party
  4.   Estonian Pirate Party
  5.   Pirate Party of France
  6.   Pirate Party Germany
  7.   Pirate Party of Greece
  8.   Pirate Party of Hungary
  9.   Pirate Party of Israel
  10.   Italian Pirate Party
  11.   Pirate Party Luxembourg
  12.   Pirate Party of Netherlands
  13.   Pirate Party of Norway
  14.   Polish Pirate Party
  15.   Portuguese Pirate Party
  16.   Pirate Party of Russia
  17.   Pirate Party of Serbia
  18.   Pirate Party of Slovakia (1/2 vote; vote shared with the other Slovakia)
  19.   Pirate Party - Slovakia (1/2 vote; vote shared with the other Slovakia)
  20.   Pirate Party Switzerland
  21.   Pirate Party of Turkey (1/2 vote; vote shared with the other Turkey)
  22.   Pirate Party Turkey (1/2 vote; vote shared with the other Turkey)
  23.   Ukrainian Pirate Community

Resignations edit

In February 2015, Pirate Party Australia resigned from PPI due to serious disagreement with the direction and management of the organization.[12] In the same month, Pirate Party UK also resigned[13] and in March the Belgian Pirate Party suspended its membership within PPI.[14]

On 20 April 2015, the Pirate Party of Iceland voted overwhelmingly to leave PPI.[15] A member of the executive, Arnaldur Sigurðarson, reported a 96.56% vote in favor of leaving, adding: "PPI has been pretty much useless when it comes to its objectives which should be to encourage international cooperation between Pirate Parties."

In May 2015, the Pirate Party of Sweden resolved with a significant majority to leave PPI, canceling their observer status.[16]

In July 2016, the Pirate Party of Canada officially withdrew from Pirate Parties International citing ongoing troubles with the organization as well as a failure to adequately provide any accomplishments over its history.[citation needed]

In 2022, the Pirate Party of Austria withdrew from the Pirate Parties International.[17]

In December 2023, Florie Marie resigned from her role as chairperson of the Pirate Parties International after less than one year.[18]

Structure edit

The PPI is governed by a board, formerly led by two co-chairs,[19] and since the Warsaw conference of 2015 by a chair and a vice-chair. Policy, governance, and applications for membership are the responsibility of the PPI General Assembly which must convene at least once per year.[20] By the current rules, board members are elected for a two-year term, half of the board being elected every year. Since the 2019 General Assembly, the Board has 9 members (previously 7). General Secretary and Treasurer positions are filled by the board by its members.

PPI Board
No. Term Co-Chairs (chair & vice-chair from 2015 onwards) General Secretary Treasurer Member of the board Alternates
1st Board IV/2010

III/2011

  Grégory Engels,

  Jerry Weyer

  Joachim Mönch   Nicolas Sahlqvist

  Aleksandar Blagojevic,
  Jakub Michálek,
  Bogomil Shopov

2nd Board III/2011

IV/2012

  Samir Allioui,

  Marcel Kolaja
(receded)

  Lola Voronina   Pat Mächler

  Finlay Archibald
(receded),
  Paul da Silva
(receded),
  Thomas Gaul

3rd Board IV/2012

IV/2013

  Grégory Engels,

  Lola Voronina

  Travis McCrea   Ed Geraghty

  Nuno Cardoso,
  Jelena Jovanović,
  Denis Simonet

  Brendan Molloy,
  Thomas Gaul,
  Alessandra Minoni,
  Andrew Norton
(receded)

4th Board IV/2013

IV/2014

  Grégory Engels,

  Vojtěch Pikal

  Thomas Gaul   Marc Tholl

  Nuno Cardoso,
  Azat Gabrakhmanov,
  Denis Simonet

  Jelena Jovanović,
  Paul Bossu,
  Radosław Pietroń,
  Yasin Aydın

5th Board IV/2014

VII/2015

  Maša Čorak,

  Koen de Voegt

  Thomas Gaul   Sebastian Krone

  Grégory Engels,
  Anders Kleppe,
  Stathis Leivaditis

  Marco Confalonieri,
  Yasin Aydın,
  Min Chiaki,
  Chemseddine Ben Jemaa

6th Board VII/2015

VII/2016

  Andrew Reitemeyer (chair)

  Patrick Schiffer (vice-chair)

  Henrique Peer   Karla Medrano

  Min Chiaki,
  Chemseddine Ben Jemaa,
  Dr. Richard Hill,

  Anders Kleppe,
  Nikolay Voronov,
  Koen De Voegt,
  Grégory Engels

7th Board VII/2016

XI/2017

  Guillaume Saouli (chair)

  Bailey Lamon (vice-chair)

  Thomas Gaul   Keith L. Goldstein

  Andrew Reitemeyer,
  Raymond Johansen,
  Koen De Voegt

  Nikolay Voronov,
  Patrick Schiffer,
  Adam Wolf,
  Grégory Engels

8th Board XI/2017

XI/2018

  Guillaume Saouli (chair)

  Bailey Lamon (vice-chair)

  Keith L. Goldstein   Thomas Gaul

  Koen De Voegt,
  Raymond Johansen,
  Nikolay Voronov

  Adam Wolf,
  Etienne Evellin,
  Daniel Dantas Prazeres,
  Grégory Engels

9th Board XI/2018

XII/2019

  Guillaume Saouli (chair)

  Bailey Lamon (vice-chair)

  Keith L. Goldstein   Michal Gill

  Etienne Evellin,
  Raymond Johansen,
  Ladislav Koubek

  Daniel Dantas Prazeres,
  Grégory Engels,
  Kitty Hundal,
  Cédric Levieux

10th Board XII/2019

XII/2020

  Bailey Lamon (chair)

  Grégory Engels (vice-chair)

  Keith L. Goldstein   Daniel Dantas Prazeres

  Cédric Levieux,
  Thomas Gaul,
  Michal Gill,
  Linda B. Tørklep,
  Giuseppe Calandra

  Sebastian Krone,
  Carlos Polo,
  Svein Mork Dahl,
  Cristina Diana Bargu[21]

11th Board XII/2020

I/2022

  Bailey Lamon (chair)

  Grégory Engels (vice-chair)

  Michal Gill   Sebastian Krone

  Keith L. Goldstein,
  Carlos Polo,
  Manuel Caicedo,
  Dario Castane,
  Daniel Dantas Prazeres

  Svein Mork Dahl,
  Thomas Gaul,
  Ji Yong Dijkhuis

12th Board since

I/2022

  Bailey Lamon (chair)

  Grégory Engels (vice-chair)

  Michal Gill   Sebastian Krone

  Keith L. Goldstein,
  Carlos Polo,
  Manuel Caicedo,
  Dario Castane,
  Alexander Isavnin,
  Mauricio Vargas

  Ji Yong Dijkhuis
  Veronika Murzynová
  Adam Wolf
  Sebastian Krone

13th Board since I/2023   Florie Marie (chair)

  Grégory Engels (vice-chair)

TBD TBD   Keith L. Goldstein
  Michael Toledo
  Bailey Lamon

  Michal Gill
  Julian Häffner
  Alexander Isavnin
  Mauricio Vargas

  Mia Utz
  Adam Wolf
  Sebastian Krone
  Raman Ojha
  Carlos Polo

All board meetings are recorded and the minutes are published here: https://wiki.pp-international.net/wiki/index.php?title=PPI_Board/Board_Meetings.

PPI Conferences edit

International Pirate Party Meetings
Name Date of Meeting Location Host Party
International Conference 2007 8-10/6/2007 Vienna, Austria
International Conference 1/2008 26-27/1/2008 Berlin, Germany
International Conference 2/2008 27-29/6/2008 Uppsala, Sweden
PPI Conference 2010 (Founding Conference) 16-18/4/2010 Brussels, Belgium Pirate Party Belgium
PPI Conference 2011 12-13/3/2011 Friedrichshafen, Germany Pirate Party Germany
PPI Conference 2012 14-15/4/2012 Prague, Czech Republic Czech Pirate Party
Pirate Summer Conference 9-10/6/2012 Aarau, Switzerland Pirate Party Aargau
PPI Conference 2013 20-21/4/2013 Kazan, Russia Pirate Party of Russia
PPI Conference 2014 12-13/4/2014 Paris, France, on OpenSpace Conference Pirate Party of France
PPI Conference 2015 4-5/7/2015 Warsaw, Poland, on OpenSpace Conference Pirate Party of Poland
PPI Conference 2016 23-24/7/2016 Berlin, Germany Pirate Party of Berlin
PPI Conference 2017 25-23/11/2017 Geneva, Switzerland Pirate Party of Switzerland
PPI Conference 2018 3-4/11/2018, online continuation on 10/11/2018 Munich, Germany Pirate Party Germany, Pirate Party Bavaria
PPI Conference 2019 7-8/12/2019 online By video conference only
PPI Conference 2020 (w/out board election) 30/5/2020 online By video conference only
PPI General Assembly 2020 6/12/2020 online By video conference only
PPI General Assembly 2021 (w/out board election) 3/7/2021 online By video conference only
PPI General Assembly 2022 8/1/2022 online By video conference only
PPI General Assembly 2022 (w/out board election) 2/7/2022 online By video conference only
PPI General Assembly 28/1/2023 online By video conference only

[22]

Pirate Party movement worldwide edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . Presseurop. 20 April 2010. Archived from the original on 2 January 2011. Retrieved 17 May 2010.
  2. ^ "Non-Governmental Organizations Committee Recommends Economic and Social Council Grant Special Status to 14 Entities, Postpones Action on 53 Others | Meetings Coverage and Press Releases".
  3. ^ (PDF). Pirate Parties International. 18 April 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 February 2019. Retrieved 7 October 2010.
  4. ^ Ben Jones (9 June 2007). "Pirates Gather at First International Pirate Party Conference". TorrentFreak. Retrieved 28 May 2010.
  5. ^ . Piratpartiet. 2 July 2008. Archived from the original on 8 September 2010. Retrieved 28 May 2010.
  6. ^ "Swedish pirates capture EU seat". BBC News. BBC. 8 June 2008. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  7. ^ Will Smale (27 April 2010). "Election: Can Pirate Party UK emulate Sweden success?". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  8. ^ . Pirate Party (Sweden). Archived from the original on 8 September 2010. Retrieved 5 April 2012.
  9. ^ "Uppsala-Deklaration". Piratenwiki (in German and English). Pirate Party Germany. 29 July 2010. Retrieved 5 April 2012.
  10. ^ The Prague Declaration
  11. ^ "PPI Member Parties". PPI. 4 July 2022. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  12. ^ "Pirate Party Australia resigns from PPI". 11 February 2015. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
  13. ^ . 25 February 2015. Archived from the original on 10 January 2017. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  14. ^ "PPBE suspends their PPI membership". 4 March 2015. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  15. ^ "Icelandic Pirates: PPIS Vote to Leave PPI and Birgitta only Politician to increase in Trust". 20 April 2015. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
  16. ^ . 10 May 2015. Archived from the original on 15 November 2017. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  17. ^ desertrold (17 December 2022). "Stellungnahme zum PPI-Austritt". ppAT Basisblog (in German). Retrieved 26 March 2024.
  18. ^ "Discours : Ma démission de la présidence du Parti Pirate International / My resign of the presidency of the International Pirate Parties – Bienvenue par minou" (in French). Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  19. ^ Pirate Parties International Statutes, Article XIII.
  20. ^ Pirate Parties International Statutes, Articles IX - XI.
  21. ^ "Resigned on 22nd of February 2020". Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  22. ^ "PPI General Assembly - PPI". wiki.pp-international.net. Retrieved 24 July 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website
    • Wiki
  • Pirate Parties International Collection at the Internet Archive

pirate, parties, international, general, concept, pirate, party, this, article, needs, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, december, 2023, international, profit, governmental, organization, with. For the general concept see Pirate Party This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information December 2023 Pirate Parties International PPI is an international non profit and non governmental organization with headquarters in Brussels Belgium 1 Formed in 2010 it serves as a worldwide organization for Pirate Parties currently representing 39 members from 36 countries across Europe the Americas Asia Africa and Australasia The Pirate Parties are political incarnations of the freedom of expression movement trying to achieve their goals by the means of the established political system rather than just through activism In 2017 PPI had been granted special consultative status to the United Nations Economic and Social Council 2 Pirate Parties InternationalAbbreviationPPIFormation18 April 2010 2010 04 18 TypeInternational nongovernmental organisationLegal statusAssociationPurposePoliticalHeadquartersBrussels BelgiumMembershipPirate parties and affiliated associationsChairpersonGregory EngelsVice ChairpersonKeith L GoldsteinGeneral SecretaryTBDTreasurerTBDMain organGeneral AssemblyWebsitewww pp international net Elected in EU Parliament Elected nationally Elected locally Registered for elections Registered in some states Unregistered but active Status unknown Ordinary members Observer members Contents 1 Aims 2 History 2 1 Uppsala Declaration 2 2 Prague Declaration 2 3 Member Parties 2 3 1 Africa 2 3 2 Asia and the Pacific 2 3 3 Americas 2 3 4 Europe 2 4 Resignations 3 Structure 4 PPI Conferences 5 Pirate Party movement worldwide 6 References 7 External linksAims editThe PPI statutes 3 give its purposes as to help establish to support and promote and to maintain communication and co operation between pirate parties around the world The PPI advocate on the international level for the promotion of the goals Its members share such as protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the digital age consumer and authors rights oriented reform of copyright and related rights support of information privacy transparency and free access to information The name Pirates itself is a reappropriation of the title that was given to internet users by the representatives of the music and film industry and does not refer to any illegal activity History editThe first Pirate Party was the Swedish Piratpartiet founded on 1 January 2006 Other parties and groups were formed in Austria Canada Denmark Finland Germany Ireland the Netherlands Poland and Spain In 2007 representatives of these parties met in Vienna Austria to form an alliance and plan for the 2009 European Parliament elections 4 Further conferences were held in 2008 in Berlin and Uppsala the latter leading to the Uppsala Declaration of a basic platform for the elections 5 In 2009 the original Pirate Party won 7 1 of the vote 6 in Sweden s European Parliament elections and won two of Sweden s twenty MEP seats inspired by a surge in membership following the trial and conviction of three members of the ideologically aligned Pirate Bay a year earlier 7 On 18 April 2010 the Pirate Parties International was formally founded in Brussels at the PPI Conference from April 16 to 18 1 Uppsala Declaration edit At the 2009 conference of Pirate Parties International in Uppsala Sweden European Pirate parties agreed on a common declaration of the parties goals for the upcoming election of the European Parliament 8 9 Central issues of the declaration are reform of copyright exemption of non commercial activity from copyright regulation reduction of the duration of copyright protections banning of DRM technologies opposition to media or hardware levies reform of patent law particularly stating that patents on life including patents on seeds and genes and software should not be allowed strengthening civil rights transparent government speedy and fair trial freedom of speech and expansion of the right to anonymity in communication Prague Declaration edit At the conference of Pirate Parties International in Prague Czech Republic in 2012 European Pirate parties agreed to run in the elections to the European Parliament in the year 2014 with a common program as well as establish a European political party European Pirate Party PPEU The declaration 10 has been followed by conferences in Potsdam and Barcelona to work on the structure of the legal body to come and the statutes for it Member Parties edit As of July 2 2022 PPI has the following 31 11 Ordinary members with the voting power of 28 parties sharing territory split the vote among themselves Africa edit nbsp Pirate Party of Tunisia Asia and the Pacific edit nbsp Pirate Party of New Zealand 1 2 vote vote shared with IP New Zealand nbsp Internet Party New Zealand 1 2 vote vote shared with PP New Zealand Americas edit nbsp Pirate Party of Brazil nbsp Pirate Party of Chile nbsp United States Pirate Party nbsp Pirate Party of Venezuela Europe edit nbsp Pirate Party of Belgium nbsp Pirate Party of Catalonia nbsp Czech Pirate Party nbsp Estonian Pirate Party nbsp Pirate Party of France nbsp Pirate Party Germany nbsp Pirate Party of Greece nbsp Pirate Party of Hungary nbsp Pirate Party of Israel nbsp Italian Pirate Party nbsp Pirate Party Luxembourg nbsp Pirate Party of Netherlands nbsp Pirate Party of Norway nbsp Polish Pirate Party nbsp Portuguese Pirate Party nbsp Pirate Party of Russia nbsp Pirate Party of Serbia nbsp Pirate Party of Slovakia 1 2 vote vote shared with the other Slovakia nbsp Pirate Party Slovakia 1 2 vote vote shared with the other Slovakia nbsp Pirate Party Switzerland nbsp Pirate Party of Turkey 1 2 vote vote shared with the other Turkey nbsp Pirate Party Turkey 1 2 vote vote shared with the other Turkey nbsp Ukrainian Pirate Community Resignations edit In February 2015 Pirate Party Australia resigned from PPI due to serious disagreement with the direction and management of the organization 12 In the same month Pirate Party UK also resigned 13 and in March the Belgian Pirate Party suspended its membership within PPI 14 On 20 April 2015 the Pirate Party of Iceland voted overwhelmingly to leave PPI 15 A member of the executive Arnaldur Sigurdarson reported a 96 56 vote in favor of leaving adding PPI has been pretty much useless when it comes to its objectives which should be to encourage international cooperation between Pirate Parties In May 2015 the Pirate Party of Sweden resolved with a significant majority to leave PPI canceling their observer status 16 In July 2016 the Pirate Party of Canada officially withdrew from Pirate Parties International citing ongoing troubles with the organization as well as a failure to adequately provide any accomplishments over its history citation needed In 2022 the Pirate Party of Austria withdrew from the Pirate Parties International 17 In December 2023 Florie Marie resigned from her role as chairperson of the Pirate Parties International after less than one year 18 Structure editThe PPI is governed by a board formerly led by two co chairs 19 and since the Warsaw conference of 2015 by a chair and a vice chair Policy governance and applications for membership are the responsibility of the PPI General Assembly which must convene at least once per year 20 By the current rules board members are elected for a two year term half of the board being elected every year Since the 2019 General Assembly the Board has 9 members previously 7 General Secretary and Treasurer positions are filled by the board by its members PPI Board No Term Co Chairs chair amp vice chair from 2015 onwards General Secretary Treasurer Member of the board Alternates 1st Board IV 2010 III 2011 nbsp Gregory Engels nbsp Jerry Weyer nbsp Joachim Monch nbsp Nicolas Sahlqvist nbsp Aleksandar Blagojevic nbsp Jakub Michalek nbsp Bogomil Shopov 2nd Board III 2011 IV 2012 nbsp Samir Allioui nbsp Marcel Kolaja receded nbsp Lola Voronina nbsp Pat Machler nbsp Finlay Archibald receded nbsp Paul da Silva receded nbsp Thomas Gaul 3rd Board IV 2012 IV 2013 nbsp Gregory Engels nbsp Lola Voronina nbsp Travis McCrea nbsp Ed Geraghty nbsp Nuno Cardoso nbsp Jelena Jovanovic nbsp Denis Simonet nbsp Brendan Molloy nbsp Thomas Gaul nbsp Alessandra Minoni nbsp Andrew Norton receded 4th Board IV 2013 IV 2014 nbsp Gregory Engels nbsp Vojtech Pikal nbsp Thomas Gaul nbsp Marc Tholl nbsp Nuno Cardoso nbsp Azat Gabrakhmanov nbsp Denis Simonet nbsp Jelena Jovanovic nbsp Paul Bossu nbsp Radoslaw Pietron nbsp Yasin Aydin 5th Board IV 2014 VII 2015 nbsp Masa Corak nbsp Koen de Voegt nbsp Thomas Gaul nbsp Sebastian Krone nbsp Gregory Engels nbsp Anders Kleppe nbsp Stathis Leivaditis nbsp Marco Confalonieri nbsp Yasin Aydin nbsp Min Chiaki nbsp Chemseddine Ben Jemaa 6th Board VII 2015 VII 2016 nbsp Andrew Reitemeyer chair nbsp Patrick Schiffer vice chair nbsp Henrique Peer nbsp Karla Medrano nbsp Min Chiaki nbsp Chemseddine Ben Jemaa nbsp Dr Richard Hill nbsp Anders Kleppe nbsp Nikolay Voronov nbsp Koen De Voegt nbsp Gregory Engels 7th Board VII 2016 XI 2017 nbsp Guillaume Saouli chair nbsp Bailey Lamon vice chair nbsp Thomas Gaul nbsp Keith L Goldstein nbsp Andrew Reitemeyer nbsp Raymond Johansen nbsp Koen De Voegt nbsp Nikolay Voronov nbsp Patrick Schiffer nbsp Adam Wolf nbsp Gregory Engels 8th Board XI 2017 XI 2018 nbsp Guillaume Saouli chair nbsp Bailey Lamon vice chair nbsp Keith L Goldstein nbsp Thomas Gaul nbsp Koen De Voegt nbsp Raymond Johansen nbsp Nikolay Voronov nbsp Adam Wolf nbsp Etienne Evellin nbsp Daniel Dantas Prazeres nbsp Gregory Engels 9th Board XI 2018 XII 2019 nbsp Guillaume Saouli chair nbsp Bailey Lamon vice chair nbsp Keith L Goldstein nbsp Michal Gill nbsp Etienne Evellin nbsp Raymond Johansen nbsp Ladislav Koubek nbsp Daniel Dantas Prazeres nbsp Gregory Engels nbsp Kitty Hundal nbsp Cedric Levieux 10th Board XII 2019 XII 2020 nbsp Bailey Lamon chair nbsp Gregory Engels vice chair nbsp Keith L Goldstein nbsp Daniel Dantas Prazeres nbsp Cedric Levieux nbsp Thomas Gaul nbsp Michal Gill nbsp Linda B Torklep nbsp Giuseppe Calandra nbsp Sebastian Krone nbsp Carlos Polo nbsp Svein Mork Dahl nbsp Cristina Diana Bargu 21 11th Board XII 2020 I 2022 nbsp Bailey Lamon chair nbsp Gregory Engels vice chair nbsp Michal Gill nbsp Sebastian Krone nbsp Keith L Goldstein nbsp Carlos Polo nbsp Manuel Caicedo nbsp Dario Castane nbsp Daniel Dantas Prazeres nbsp Svein Mork Dahl nbsp Thomas Gaul nbsp Ji Yong Dijkhuis 12th Board since I 2022 nbsp Bailey Lamon chair nbsp Gregory Engels vice chair nbsp Michal Gill nbsp Sebastian Krone nbsp Keith L Goldstein nbsp Carlos Polo nbsp Manuel Caicedo nbsp Dario Castane nbsp Alexander Isavnin nbsp Mauricio Vargas nbsp Ji Yong Dijkhuis nbsp Veronika Murzynova nbsp Adam Wolf nbsp Sebastian Krone 13th Board since I 2023 nbsp Florie Marie chair nbsp Gregory Engels vice chair TBD TBD nbsp Keith L Goldstein nbsp Michael Toledo nbsp Bailey Lamon nbsp Michal Gill nbsp Julian Haffner nbsp Alexander Isavnin nbsp Mauricio Vargas nbsp Mia Utz nbsp Adam Wolf nbsp Sebastian Krone nbsp Raman Ojha nbsp Carlos Polo All board meetings are recorded and the minutes are published here https wiki pp international net wiki index php title PPI Board Board Meetings PPI Conferences editInternational Pirate Party Meetings Name Date of Meeting Location Host Party International Conference 2007 8 10 6 2007 Vienna Austria International Conference 1 2008 26 27 1 2008 Berlin Germany International Conference 2 2008 27 29 6 2008 Uppsala Sweden PPI Conference 2010 Founding Conference 16 18 4 2010 Brussels Belgium Pirate Party Belgium PPI Conference 2011 12 13 3 2011 Friedrichshafen Germany Pirate Party Germany PPI Conference 2012 14 15 4 2012 Prague Czech Republic Czech Pirate Party Pirate Summer Conference 9 10 6 2012 Aarau Switzerland Pirate Party Aargau PPI Conference 2013 20 21 4 2013 Kazan Russia Pirate Party of Russia PPI Conference 2014 12 13 4 2014 Paris France on OpenSpace Conference Pirate Party of France PPI Conference 2015 4 5 7 2015 Warsaw Poland on OpenSpace Conference Pirate Party of Poland PPI Conference 2016 23 24 7 2016 Berlin Germany Pirate Party of Berlin PPI Conference 2017 25 23 11 2017 Geneva Switzerland Pirate Party of Switzerland PPI Conference 2018 3 4 11 2018 online continuation on 10 11 2018 Munich Germany Pirate Party Germany Pirate Party Bavaria PPI Conference 2019 7 8 12 2019 online By video conference only PPI Conference 2020 w out board election 30 5 2020 online By video conference only PPI General Assembly 2020 6 12 2020 online By video conference only PPI General Assembly 2021 w out board election 3 7 2021 online By video conference only PPI General Assembly 2022 8 1 2022 online By video conference only PPI General Assembly 2022 w out board election 2 7 2022 online By video conference only PPI General Assembly 28 1 2023 online By video conference only 22 Pirate Party movement worldwide editThis section is empty You can help by adding to it February 2024 See also Pirate Party and List of Pirate PartiesReferences edit a b The Pirate International is born Presseurop 20 April 2010 Archived from the original on 2 January 2011 Retrieved 17 May 2010 Non Governmental Organizations Committee Recommends Economic and Social Council Grant Special Status to 14 Entities Postpones Action on 53 Others Meetings Coverage and Press Releases Pirate Parties International Statutes PDF Pirate Parties International 18 April 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 24 February 2019 Retrieved 7 October 2010 Ben Jones 9 June 2007 Pirates Gather at First International Pirate Party Conference TorrentFreak Retrieved 28 May 2010 The Uppsala Declaration or European Pirate Parties Declaration of a basic platform for the European Parliamentary Election of 2009 Piratpartiet 2 July 2008 Archived from the original on 8 September 2010 Retrieved 28 May 2010 Swedish pirates capture EU seat BBC News BBC 8 June 2008 Retrieved 26 September 2011 Will Smale 27 April 2010 Election Can Pirate Party UK emulate Sweden success BBC News BBC Retrieved 26 September 2011 European Pirate Platform 2009 Pirate Party Sweden Archived from the original on 8 September 2010 Retrieved 5 April 2012 Uppsala Deklaration Piratenwiki in German and English Pirate Party Germany 29 July 2010 Retrieved 5 April 2012 The Prague Declaration PPI Member Parties PPI 4 July 2022 Retrieved 4 July 2022 Pirate Party Australia resigns from PPI 11 February 2015 Retrieved 11 February 2015 PPUK leaves PPI 25 February 2015 Archived from the original on 10 January 2017 Retrieved 25 February 2015 PPBE suspends their PPI membership 4 March 2015 Retrieved 8 March 2015 Icelandic Pirates PPIS Vote to Leave PPI and Birgitta only Politician to increase in Trust 20 April 2015 Retrieved 20 April 2015 Motion P01 Proposition ang att lamna observatorsmedlemskapet i PPI 10 May 2015 Archived from the original on 15 November 2017 Retrieved 10 May 2015 desertrold 17 December 2022 Stellungnahme zum PPI Austritt ppAT Basisblog in German Retrieved 26 March 2024 Discours Ma demission de la presidence du Parti Pirate International My resign of the presidency of the International Pirate Parties Bienvenue par minou in French Retrieved 9 December 2023 Pirate Parties International Statutes Article XIII Pirate Parties International Statutes Articles IX XI Resigned on 22nd of February 2020 Retrieved 13 March 2020 PPI General Assembly PPI wiki pp international net Retrieved 24 July 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pirate Parties International Official website Wiki Pirate Parties International Collection at the Internet Archive Portal nbsp Freedom of speech Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pirate Parties International amp oldid 1224205813, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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