Chris Jenkinson wrote:
After a task force as a group were happy with their
suggested
modification of a policy, they would require consent from the community
to implement it. This would probably be done via a simple straw poll,
and due to the task force already having a mandate from the community to
develop changes, would be typically lower than the usual "consensus"
pass mark (e.g. a simple majority would be sufficient to implement the
change).
So much of this tries to put old whine in new bottles. It is based on
the premise that policies should provide unchangeable black and white
alternatives. Or that a majority vote creates a policy that will be
binding on everybody, and remain fairly inflexible. It sets up
situations where there are winners and losers, and minimizes the
opportunities for those losers to seek alternative solutions.
This would be useful for Wikipedia because of the
increasing size of the
community. Due to its size, people are excluded from topics they may be
interested in discussing and debating but may not know are under
discussion purely due to the amount of things which are under
discussion. Unfortunately this means it is likely that good ideas are
excluded. Forming a body tasked specifically with reform of an area,
which actively solicits feedback from the community gives people a
single place to discuss topics they are interested in. In a large group,
decision making becomes difficult.
This is all superficially true. At least the problems that you describe
are very real. What we really need is new and imaginative ways to
approach decision making, not just grafting tired old techniques onto
the problems. Whatever the solution it must be very wiki. This implies
a very high level of uncertainty that goes well beyond the comfort zone
of many people.
The general idea of this was inspired in part by select
committees in
legislative bodies. In the House of Commons, select committees are
groups of MPs, from all political parties, each one dedicated to a
different government department. Their role is to hold the government to
account, solicit feedback from the general public, and to report to
Parliament. While of course a direct comparison between Wikipedia and a
legislative body is naturally flawed, the concept of a small body of
people, interested and dedicated to a specific field, to help improve
the system to improve its functioning is a good one and works well in
practice.
Commons commttees may very well do what you say... to a point, but when
they reach a conclusion contrary to the cabinet's desires party
discipline must prevail.
Things to consider
* How would task forces be created?
Somebody starts a talk page
* How would members of a task force be appointed?
Let anyone participate at any time.
* Is a single "policy committee" a better
idea than having multiple task
forces?
Whatever ... It makes no difference.
* How do we ensure that a task force is representative
of opinion across
Wikipedia/has community support?
That's impossible.
* How do we ensure that time spent dealing with policy
does not affect
contributors' time spent on encyclopaedic articles?
:-D Extend the length of the day beyond 24 hours.
Ec