Sarah is right, and raises an important question.
After considerable discussion a quite sizable majority voted to delete "Jewish ethnocentrism" People discussed the specific contents of the article, and the very notion of an article on this topic.
Mikkalai is now making the argument that a specific article was deleted, but that a new article could be written in the same name-space. The opportunity for abuse is clear.
If the only problem with an article is its contents, then there is no need to delete it -- editors can delete the contents that is inappropriate or bad, and put in good contents.
It logically follows that if people believe an article must be deleted, it is because they -- or many of them -- consider the article unsalvageable; no amount of editing content can save it.
It seems pretty obvious to me that Mikkelai's claim that the name-space was not deleted, so he can write a new article in it, is just an attempt to circumvent the vote for deletion. Not only does this demonstrate bad faith; it sets a bad precedent. Anyone who was invested in any deleted article can just bring it back and write some more. And others would once again go through the lengthy process of a vote for deletion.
Perhaps we need not always permanently delete a name space -- maybe in some cases, a moratorium of half a year or a year would suffice. But I think we need a clear policy on this: the name spaces of articles deleted are either deleted as well, or protected for some significant period.
In the meantime, what kind of action can be taken in this case? The standard cycle of attempts -- RFC, mediation, arbitration -- will take a lot of time, if the policy is unclear. If the policy is clear, then we should be able to resolve this immediately.
Steve
Steven L. Rubenstein Associate Professor Department of Sociology and Anthropology Bentley Annex Ohio University Athens, Ohio 45701