Hi Risker / Anne,
In response to the points you raise:
* A panel suggests a group of people who discuss and decide things, it wouldn't be that, it would be a pool of adjudicators.
* The home page shows 130,858 active editors, if 15% of those are female then it means there must be 19,628 female editors to draw the 50% from.
* I don't participate in "dispute management", but then I have never been asked to.
* More people might agree to take part in dispute management if they know that their input will be kept anonymous.
* Administrators would do what they have always done.
Example of a possible way to approach potential adjudicators:
Those eligible (maybe they've been editing for more than a year and they have an edit history of 1,000+ edits) are sent a private e-mail, this would be a circular to all eligible editors. It would say something like:
> "According to our records you have been with us for more than [length of time] and have contributed over [number of edits]. We would therefore like to invite you join our pool of adjudicators which we are currently in the process of establishing. The purpose of adjudication would to consider editors requests to block other editors ('cases'). We envisage adjudication to be the first stage in managing cases with the second stage being handled by administrators.
> Your anonymity as an adjudicator would be protected by us at all times, in fact one of the conditions of being an adjudicator would be that you have no direct contact with those involved any of the cases which you are asked to consider (although you may inform the Wikipedia community that you are an adjudicator). If you wish to become an adjudicator please click on the link and fill out the form. (The form would include equal opportunities monitoring questions http://www.equalityhumanrights.com/private-and-public-sector-guidance/employing-people/recruitment/monitoring-forms )."
Example case:
* Editor 'X' wants a block against editor 'Y'.
* Editor X submits a case for adjudication.
* Adjudicator 'A' requests a case, the case is randomly selected from those pending by computer.
* Adjudicator A reads the details and decides whether X has a point, or whether Y appears to have behaved reasonably (even if X didn't like it).
* Adjudicator A marks a one of two check boxes, "Pass to next stage? Yes [box] No [box]" (perhaps other boxes like "I lack the technical knowledge to adjudicate on this.") and a small comments form, maybe 1,000 characters.
* The same case goes to a few more adjudicators, 50% of whom are female.
* If enough rule that the case has merit then it goes forward and administrators deal with it as they currently do (the idea is to weed out groundless requests and save administrators and above time).
* Their would be a maximum number of cases that any single adjudicator could rule on in a 24 or 48 hour period.
* From time to time there would be a general call, "we currently have a backlog of cases".
I must confess, I had to logout of Wikipedia and remind myself about what questions are asked when joining. I'm so used to filling in Equal Opportunities Monitoring Forms for statistical purposes that I didn't really think about not being able to just run the query. Having said that, most user pages of active users that I've seen do appear to volunteer which gender they are. It is probably possible to go back.
Marie
Date: Sun, 6 Jul 2014 13:45:34 -0400
From: risker.wp@gmail.com
To: gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
Subject: Re: [Gendergap] Addressing incivility (was: men on lists)
A few points here:
- If less than 15% of editors identify as female, and the vast majority of those do not regularly participate in "dispute management", how are you going to establish a panel that is 50% women? This isn't a small point - there are so few individuals generally speaking who regularly participate in dispute management at all (I'd put the number on enwiki at less than 150 total), and many of them are there because of the perceived power gradient, not because they have a genuine interest in managing disputes.
- What disputes, exactly, would the panel be analysing? I'm having a hard time visualizing this. "User:XXXX made a sexist comment here (link)"?
- What would you expect administrators to do, exactly? They're directly accountable for the use of their tools and have to be able to personally justify any actions they take - and surprisingly, a huge percentage of administrators (almost) never use the block button. (There's a subset of admins who only use their tools to read deleted versions, and another subset that only shows up once a year, makes a couple of edits so they keep their tools, and disappears again.)
- How would you develop any statistics based on gender of editor, when the overwhelming majority of editors do not identify their gender at all in any consistent fashion? I've personally never added any gender categories to my userpage, for example, and I have no intention of doing so now.
Some thoughts.
Risker/Anne
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