Re: consensus and majority vote | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Sharon Villines (sharon![]() |
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Date: Thu, 18 Jul 2002 08:28:00 -0600 (MDT) |
on 7/18/2002 2:28 AM, Tree Bressen at tree [at] ic.org wrote: > I definitely concur with this. In fact Robert's Rules seem awfully > burdensome to me--with all these nitpicky formalities required, it looks > like it really slows things down compared to what a well-functioning > consensus group can do. The original Robert's Rules of Order is no longer used. It was written during the great time of dictionary-making when one's intelligence and seriousness were judged by the complexity of one's lists. With the great migration of populations that did not share common community goals, along with the effort to write down the "real" English language, there was an effort to formulate a process that was fair and known to all. Robert's Rules of Order Revised is the standard, and there are much simpler forms of parliamentary procedure including one used by the American Psychological Association. The only relevant rules are those a group chooses to adopt. In the early days of the women's movement, the Women's Political Caucus did Roberts Rules of Order workshops since women had not learned them. Men learned them in debating societies in schools that women were not allowed to attend or political organizations where women were not allowed to participate. Even Teddy Kennedy said "Get the broads out of the room" when political strategies were discussed. You only learned parliamentary procedures if you were a part of the Old Boy's clubs. As a result , women simply did not know how to participate in a modern governance process. Having participated in these workshops (led by Bella Abzug for one -- when Bella spoke, you learned the stuff) I've seen Robert's Rules used very effectively to bring out and structure very fair and complex discussions and decisions, including abortion on demand (when it wasn't even legal) and weighted voting to equalize the voice of any minority. But to be used effectively and fairly, you have to know how to use it. "Official" groups have a registered parliamentarian on hand to interpret the rules. My favorite rule produced the following, "The chair senses chaos on the floor and requests a 5-minute recess to confer." Hearing no objections, she then went down and talked to the mass of angry women who were literally standing up on their chairs shouting. The issues were sorted out and the meeting resumed after a 5-minute extension. While I fully endorse consensus as a decision threshold, it is not contradictory to Roberts Rules of Order and could benefit greatly from some of the rules. Queues for speaking drive me nuts, for example, when 6 people speak on the basis of incorrect information before someone is "allowed" to correct their assumptions. Points of Information always take precedence. You can't continue a discussion without correct information. Sorry this is so long but Roberts Rules of Order bashing is one of my pet peeves, along with consensus is new. Sharon -- Sharon Villines Takoma Village Cohousing, Washington DC http://www.takomavillage.org _______________________________________________ Cohousing-L mailing list Cohousing-L [at] cohousing.org Unsubscribe and other info: http://www.communityforum.net/mailman/listinfo/cohousing-l
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consensus and majority vote Tree Bressen, July 17 2002
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Re: consensus and majority vote Sharon Villines, July 18 2002
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Re: consensus and majority vote Gary.Stewart, July 18 2002
- Re: consensus and majority vote Sharon Villines, July 19 2002
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Re: consensus and majority vote Gary.Stewart, July 18 2002
- Re: consensus and majority vote Sharon Villines, July 18 2002
- Re: consensus and majority vote Racheli Gai, July 18 2002
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Re: consensus and majority vote Sharon Villines, July 18 2002
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Re: consensus and majority vote cscheuer, July 18 2002
- Re: consensus and majority vote Racheli Gai, July 18 2002
- Re: consensus and majority vote cscheuer, July 18 2002
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