Re: How Diverse is Co-Housing, Really? | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: John Ladwig (jladwig![]() |
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Date: Mon, 3 May 93 14:29 CDT |
BARANSKI [at] VEAMF1.NL.NUWC.NAVY.MIL <BARANSKI [at] VEAMF1.NL.NUWC.NAVY.MIL> writes on 3 May 93 at 14:11 CDT > My impression of cohousing was not that you can select who will be > allowed in, but more like you can state what values/* you are want > in your community, and it was up to the individual applicants to > decide whther this was something that they were interested in or > not. So maybe I was a bit more worried that about new people > coming in and changing everything around then you are. I certainly do not wish to hide *anything* about the members of our community from prospective members. TRG has an open information policy for prospective members, including archives our (now inactive) APA (amateur press association - kinda like a bbs for paper). This helps to inform others, and builds the self-selection process you speak of. However, we do not have an open-door policy on membership. Anyone is welcome to express interest, but due to the nature of our consensus-based decision making process, we have to reach a group decision on individual applicants, after a formal, mentored, prospective membership process. We haven't had to vote anyone down, but we have decided as a group to not recruit certain individuals, based on the reservations of other members. > Explictly selecting selecting who to include and who to exclude > strikes me as being prone to favoritism, and selfselecting against > diversity. Not necessarily; would my wife and I be showing "favoritism" or slecting against diversity by not wishing to include a person who previously sexually abused her into our community? There is no legal decision on that episode, but would we have to make *any* person a part of our community? Or, to use a less emotionally weighted example, should a cohousing community essentially be forced to accept a person who has proven to be a pedantic, rule-obsessed parliamentarian who regularly carries a copy of Robert's Rules of Order, who tends to use it to cause the most obstruction possible in public meetings? Granted, I think we'd drive such a person crazy during the "prospective member" phase, and hopefully the community and the prospective member would decide mutually that this wasn't going to work out. However, I see no reason why an existing community (which we are, just unbuilt) should have to accept someone who would disrupt the functioning or goals of that community. -- Internet: john.ladwig [at] soils.umn.edu Fidonet: John Ladwig 1:282/341 jladwig [at] torpedo.forestry.umn.edu
- Re: How Diverse is Co-Housing, Really?, (continued)
- Re: How Diverse is Co-Housing, Really? John Ladwig, May 3 1993
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Re: How Diverse is Co-Housing, Really? BARANSKI, May 3 1993
- Re: Re: How Diverse is Co-Housing, Really? apguirard, May 3 1993
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Re: How Diverse is Co-Housing, Really? BARANSKI, May 3 1993
- Re: How Diverse is Co-Housing, Really? John Ladwig, May 3 1993
- Re: How Diverse is Co-Housing, Really? BARANSKI, May 4 1993
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Re: How Diverse is Co-Housing, Really? Dan Everett, May 4 1993
- Re: How do you deal with resale of units? apguirard, May 4 1993
- Re: How Diverse is Co-Housing, Really? Judy, May 4 1993
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