Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee Elections December 2009/Candidate statements
2009 Arbitration Committee Election status
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This is the candidate statements page, where editors wishing to run in the 2009 Arbitration Committee elections may present themselves and their nomination statement.
- Criteria for running
- Editors must have 1,000 mainspace edits as of 00:00 UTC on 10 November 2009. For the purposes of this requirement, deleted edits may be counted.
- Editors must be either 18 years of age or older, or of majority age in their place of residence, whichever is higher.
- Editors will be required (per this thread) to identify to the Wikimedia Foundation before taking their seats. (See also, WT:ACE2007#Ruling on age limit.)
- Candidacy statements
- Statements may not exceed 400 words, although you are free to link to a longer statement if you wish. You should submit your statement using the below section ("To run for this year's elections"). Statements are formatted using the {{Arbitration Committee Elections statement}} template. Statements may be submitted at any point after 00:00 on 10 November 2009 and before 23:59 24 November 2009 (all times are UTC). Any statements submitted out of this period will not be accepted (and may be removed by any editor).
- To run for this year's elections
- Candidacies are entered into the election using the below inputbox. Append your username to "Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee Elections December 2009/Candidate statements/", ensuring that you keep all of that text (including the "/"):
- Further instructions will be given once you click "create a statement." You will be reminded of this when submitting your statement, but do note that you will need to transclude your statement, once it is saved, at #Standing candidates using the following code:
{{Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee Elections December 2009/Candidate statements/Your username}}
Standing candidates
- The so-called "Arbitration Committee" has zero legitimacy. Wikipedia is a community project, which means that only institutions created by the Wikipedia community--and not by one man--have any legitimate authority. The Arbitration Committee's history makes it impossible for any action taken by it to be legitimate or worthy of being taken seriously. That many people do deal with it as if it were legitimate is no indication of its legitimacy, any more than handing over one's wallet to a mugger to avoid being beaten is an endorsement of the legitimacy of mugging.
- I am running to counter this harmful influence. If elected, I would, quite simply, vote to decline any and all cases presented before the Arbitration Committee, instead referring them to community institutions and processes that actually have legitimacy and the moral authority to enforce a final decision.
- Kmweber (talk · contribs · count · logs · target logs · block log · lu · rfas · rfb · arb · rfc · lta · checkuser · socks · rights · blocks · protects · deletions · moves)
![]() | Arbitration Committee Election 2009 candidate: Kmweber
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What have I done on Wikipedia? I have written an FA, contributed to another, helped establish the Article Incubator and have edited various other articles, guidelines and policies.
What have I done that is relevant to this role? I have been involved in trying to resolve disputes of various types from shouting matches at certain project pages, increasingly heated disputes between users and other problems I occasionally encounter during my wanderings through Wikipedia. I was appointed as one of three referees in the recent Macedonia naming dispute and the resolution that we produced has resulted in greater stability for the editors in that part of Wikipedia.
What do I think the point of arbitration is? Arbitration should try to resolve issues to the benefit of the encyclopaedia - it is not about punishment, but should instead typically be about restoring a collegial collaborative environment so that editors can focus less on disputes and more on the production of encyclopaedic content. This will often involve sanctioning individual editors, and administrators should in particular be scrutinised if there is evidence of impropriety, but sanctions in of themselves are not a goal of arbitration. As an arbitrator, I would not hesitate to impose sanctions, but they must improve the collaborative environment that we strive to create on Wikipedia.
What would I do differently? I think some cases in the past have lacked focus – reams of evidence were produced to speak generally to the charge that some editor is “bad” or “good” and new areas of behaviour to be examined are introduced at random points throughout the arbitration process, requiring yet more evidence to be produced by the other parties. I would like to see a clear scope explicitly defined for all cases when they are accepted. Clerks would be empowered to remove evidence that does not speak directly to the scope of the case, and the scope could be expanded if necessary. This would require consent of the entire group, but it is something that I will push for to improve efficiency and accessibility, as well as removing obfuscation. I will be engaging in “active” arbitration by asking direct questions, requesting specific diffs and making sure that relevant points in a case come to light so that the Committee can determine the facts of a case rather than relying on interpretations and slants imposed on evidence by the various sides of a dispute.
- Fritzpoll (talk · contribs · count · logs · target logs · block log · lu · rfas · rfb · arb · rfc · lta · checkuser · socks · rights · blocks · protects · deletions · moves)
![]() | Arbitration Committee Election 2009 candidate: Fritzpoll
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Withdrawn candidates
- Candidates who withdrew prior to voting.
<poem> Chutznik, Chutznik (talk · contribs). Withdrew on 13:54, November 24, 2009.
- Candidates who withdrew during the voting period.
Secret, Secret (talk · contribs). Withdrew on 13:19, December 7, 2009.