Re: Objections in Consensus [was: principle vs preference / Formal Consensus
From: Sharon Villines (sharonsharonvillines.com)
Date: Thu, 29 Mar 2007 06:45:12 -0700 (PDT)

On Mar 29, 2007, at 9:26 AM, Rosemary Gould wrote:

Does sociocracy
allow for objections to be presented repeatedly over a long period?

Yes. All decisions are reconsidered (1) any time there is new information and (2) on a regular schedule. The "regular schedule" might be in the context of a 2 year strategic plan review and it might just be a re-affirmation. It doesn't have to be a whole long process of re-discussing if there is nothing to discuss.

I'm not sure how specific the proposal was in the Quaker example, but if there had been a proposal to ban slave holders from the meeting that did not achieve consensus, it could be raised again within the same rules that allow re-raising any other issue. The facilitator would ask for a quick reaction round on the request to reconsider -- one word, up or down.

A proposal does not have to be discussed if there is no consent to discuss it so the member couldn't hold up the meeting to discuss an issue no one wanted to discuss, but it could be raised again. And in this case, over time, the consents were greater in number and eventually the proposal passed.

Sharon
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Sharon Villines
http://www.sociocracy.info

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