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Larry Sanger
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« on: January 15, 2007, 06:09:35 PM » |
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Comments requested. This is a draft. The final version, with a governance proposal, will be posted on Citizendium-L.
Dear Citizens,
Let me explain why I want to develop the Citizendium's governance system next.
The Citizendium project needs to expand its leadership. We need to add leadership to editorial workgroups, start new necessary functions such as interviews of "topic informants," do fundraising, and (possibly) start completely new Citizendium projects. In short, the Citizendium project needs effective project governance mechanisms. Executive Committee members are already put upon with their own specific tasks, and besides, they were never meant to serve as a deliberative body. Moreover, I have neither the time to "rule by fiat," nor the inclination to do so even at this early stage, for the simple reason that doing so inevitably results in inadequate legitimacy and poorly motivated participants. My experience has taught me that people are motivated to contribute to a collectively-managed projects by being given responsibility in such projects.
So, while leadership is necessary if anything is going to happen at all, it is actually quite important that I do not take too much responsibility upon myself. This is a reason, perhaps the main reason, that I have not elaborated or insisted upon many points in the CZ Policy Outline. Appropriate and respected bodies and leaders, who together share authority in the project, are absolutely necessary to secure the all-important sense of legitimacy needed to organize the largest and most highly motivated groups of intellectuals online.
It is one thing to have hundreds of editors and authors declare that they are interested in contributing. It is quite another thing actually to motivate them to contribute. We have, I think, a quorum of editors and authors now; what we need now is to organize ourselves into a sort of community. So we need to develop an actual governance system.
Think now of what that means. If the Citizendium succeeds as we want it to, then we will have created the largest and most credible encyclopedia in history, the first source for reference on virtually anything. Put that way, it seems unlikely that we will succeed, for the simple reason that excellent and difficult things are very rare (as Spinoza said). But we're on our way, and there are some reasons to think we will succeed. Now, if we were to succeed, then as a single source of information, our project would wield considerable power. That power would be in the hands of project's governance mechanisms; it is essential, therefore, that we think systematically about how that power should be used.
What I will do in the following is to describe briefly and abstractly what our governance mechanisms needs to accomplish; then propose several principles and constraints on the choice of such mechanisms; then actually make a proposal about the shape of our governance mechanisms.
================================================ What Citizendium governance mechanisms should do ================================================
Project governance means, roughly, actions that tend to establish or enforce--in a formalized way, attributable to those tasked with the general direction of the project--general rules or standards, and broad initiatives.
CZ governance mechanisms should, therefore, provide us a way to create "legitimized" rules or standards, and to start broad initiatives according to established mechanisms.
=========================== Theoretical meta-principles ===========================
I begin with some quite theoretical meta-principles:
(i) One central aim of CZ is to create the greatest possible general information resource. That requires that we collect the largest possible body of intellectuals from the world over. This means we must strive toward openness and democracy in some sense, because many intellectuals will not participate in something over which they personally do not, at least potentially and partially, have some control.
(ii) In its own decisionmaking and other governance, CZ must always follow the rule of law, as opposed to the arbitrary rule of persons. In other words, persons in authority in the project must act according to pre-established rules that have themselves been adopted according to a regular, legitimate process. As a legal rule, not only is this essential to justice, it serves as a guarantee that the project will continue on according to certain fundamental principles.
(iii) While generally people should be free to work at their own pleasure--so that everyone in the project enjoys a great latitude of action--the power to make consequential decisions should not be concentrated in the hands of any small or permanent group of people. One well-recognized way to "spread authority around" is the "separation of powers." This involves distinguishing the powers (a) of rule enforcement, (b) of rule adoption, and (c) of the execution of new and enhanced projects. It is also important to spread authority out among many people of the same role.
(iv) Both positions of authority, and the mechanisms for governance that persons in those positions follow, should be defined ultimately--if not in detail--by a community charter. The reason for this is that various competing "powers" must have some document that they agree contains the descriptions of their roles and relationships. Without such a fundamental document, as many legal theorists believe, it is more difficult to follow a rule of law; instead, without declared "rules of the game," decisions are made by the force of various competing personalities, which inevitably leads to intractable conflict.
(v) The Citizendium is to be a neutral source of information, and as such, it is extremely important to avoid, as much as possible, acrimonous conflicts, both political and personal, among participants. Collaboration is difficult in the fact of conflict, and so in a collaborative project, conflict demands a resolution. But resolutions of conflict, if one-sided, have a tendency to concentrate power in the hands of the victorious party and subsequently to produce a successful "party line" in the victorious factions. Such a party line could then bias the content of the Citizendium. The method of resolving disputes, therefore, must tend as much as possible to defuse situations rather than to declare victors, and the governance mechanisms of the Citizendium should be established as much as possible to avoid conflict in the first place.
(vi) The opportunity before us is not merely to create an encyclopedia, but to give gentle expert guidance to an encyclopedia project that is as nearly as dynamic as Wikipedia. But governing bureaucracies, if unchecked, might make the project the opposite of dynamic. For this reason, the bodies and processes employed to govern the Citizendium should be the most efficient possible, and should not throw up roadblocks to efficient development on the wiki.
========================= Constraints on governance =========================
It is on the grounds of such meta-principles that I propose several constraints on governance roles and mechanisms. In other words, what follows are some rules that we ought to follow in designing the Citizendium project's governance mechanisms.
(1a) Openness. Deliberation on rules and initiatives must be done out in the open, available to observe and, to an extent consistent with the objective requirements of efficient deliberation, participate in. Democracy and the rule of law both require openness.
(1b) Privacy in an open project. Therefore, we should balance the privacy requirements of our participants and of potential partner organizations against our own collaborative and democratic requirement of openness. Matters that affect individuals exclusively may remain private. But generally speaking, no important decision, affecting indefinite numbers of project members (or of members of the public), should be made privately except by duly appointed and responsible representatives, and then only if a potential external partner expects privacy during initial deliberations; and no decision that affects the nature, or fundamental principles and directions, of the project should ever be made privately. Our partners must be comfortable with their employees working in an open project, insofar as they are working with us.
(2a) Independence of governments, corporations, and other organizations. There must be no entanglements with governments, which, even more than powerful corporations, have the authority to require changes to and even to destroy our project, which has its own sovereign constraints. The project should never become dependent upon grants that would subject it to special oversight by any government body, or indeed any external body.
(2b) Ideological independence. To be as acceptable as possible to the greatest number of intellectuals from around the world, the Citizendium as an organization must not issue any political, religious, other other ideological statements or resolutions, nor should any such statements be made by Citizendium representatives when they are acting in an official capacity.
(3a) Conflict of interest in general. Generally, persons tasked with making important decisions must avoid even the appearance of conflicts of interest, i.e., where their own interests are served or undermined by the outcome of a decision that ought to be made on behalf of the project as a whole.
(3b) Conflict of interest regarding wiki work. Since the actual work of the Citizendium takes place on a wiki, and since wiki work by persons in authority can have the tendency be perceived as making decisions and setting rules--in the same way that a speeding police cruiser can set a de facto speed limit on a stretch of highway--there must be a clear distinction made, for persons in authority, between "official" work and work done as a rank-and-file member. In other words, persons in authority will have no special rights to "throw their weight around"; any special authority with which they are entrusted will be specific and clearly delimited. Furthermore, it will be forbidden that a person in authority make decisions about disputes in which they have participated as a rank-and-file member.
(4) Sortition. Actual positions of responsibility are to be filled, first, by any willing and qualified participants, and then, when there are more willing participants than positions, by some well-defined process of sortition--i.e., "drawing straws" among qualified candidates. This should include the position of Editor-in-Chief. Of course, there are many ways to draw straws; one that reduces politicking while maximizing the likelihood of high competence will be the best. Fuller argument may be found below.
(5) Term limits. Furthermore, positions of authority--other than those shared by very large numbers of people, such as the position of editor--should be limited by term. This should include the position of Editor-in-Chief. This should, like sortition, tend to reduce the amount of politicking and ideological warfare that might threaten the neutrality of the Citizendium.
(6) Soft security. In many online communities, and wikis in particular, rights to participate are given out fairly freely, on the "honor principle," with rule-breaking being strongly discouraged by the community at large, and with rule-breakers reined in after the fact. This practice, called "soft security," ensures that the registration process is efficient, not a bottleneck to project growth.
(7) Non-perfectionism. Individuals working alone may be perfectionists; many collaborators cannot, not without huge inefficiencies. Individuals may work for an indefinite period on works and create something that they think is virtually perfect. But in collaborative work, such perfectionism is something that could be achieved only through elaborate and time-consuming bureaucratic processes. Such processes, and thus perfectionism itself, are incompatible with the efficient, dynamic content production systems we wish to develop for the Citizendium.
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