[Foundation-l] Chapters as intermediaries between WMF and communities (was Re: Omidyar Network Commits $2 Million Grant to Wikimedia Foundation)

Florence Devouard Anthere9 at yahoo.com
Fri Aug 28 15:01:29 UTC 2009


Kropotkine_113 wrote:
> Thank you very much all of you (Brigitte SB, Ting Chen, Mickael Snow and
> others).
> 
> To close my participation in this thread I just add three points  :

...

> - Even more important point is the cultural gap between Foundation's
> intentions and communication, which are very "north-american slanted" (I
> don't know how to say that), and its perception by a very multicultural
> community. The gap is particularly large concerning financial/executive
> power relations. You have to be very careful about this and to be very
> pedagogic when you report such decisions, because when the story will
> appear in french village pump (for example) it will be hard tuff for
> chapter's members to explain it correctly (if possible). The answer
> often used is : "It's not evil, it's just the way american people deal
> with it every day". Just let me tell you that's not a sufficient answer
> for many people (like me ;)). I think that a non-used but very efficient
> solution would be to share informations before the official report and
> to work closely with local chapters ; but this is a more wide problem
> and slightly out-of-the-scope of this thread.
> 
> Kropotkine_113

Using the chapters as intermediaries between the Wikimedia Foundation 
and the communities is actually a solution that has been used in the past.

It certainly feature a certain efficiency (proximity with the community 
and common language).

However, I am not convinced it is a good idea to go this way.

First because it requires the chapter to actually agree to a certain 
degree with the action of the Wikimedia Foundation. Which requires 
internal discussion within the chapter, information of all board 
members, agreement over the action, and planification over the 
communication need. In itself, that's quite an achievement.

Even if there is no clear agreement, it seems very odd that, say, the 
chapter would somehow give arguments to justify and explain something 
done by WMF to editors, whilst it does not support this action. In case 
the WMF does something that the community does not like, there is little 
reason for the heat and light to fall on the shoulders of another 
organization.

That's WMF responsibility to assume their decisions, to inform 
stakeholders of their decisions, and hopefully to offer channels for 
stakeholders to give their feedback.

I am not convinced it is within the role of chapters to be the 
intermediaries. And doing it regularly would possibly mislead WMF to get 
further apports from contributors.


Ant





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