Disclaimer: the below is a half-baked long-term proposal for a process change. If you're wondering about how to do useful work today, please ignore it. But comments welcome.
Hi, My experience has been that the policy process works pretty well when a policy delegate is involved in the discussion. Seconds for good proposals are not hard to find, most parties have good faith, and the result is that the proposals that get adopted are well reviewed and carefully thought out. On the other hand, when policy delegates are not involved, it seems to me that some participants are frightened by the complex process into not participating, and others are perhaps not fearful enough, resulting in a chaotic discussion. I would like to propose an alternative policy process. In practice for policy delegates, I expect it might be similar to the current one, but for contributors I think it would be more intuitive. It would work like this: 1. Person proposing a policy amendment describes the change, with any supporting information she can find to help explain it. 2. Discussion. 3. When the amendment looks, in the policy delegates' opinion, like good policy (they may decide what that means), a patch gets applied to the debian-policy repository. Likely impact of this change: less diffusion of responsibility when policy proposals get stalled. Imagine a proposal that is stalled because it is unclear. The advocate sends pings now and then summarizing the discussion and asking what she can do to help move the change forward. Eventually someone would reply, explaining what about the proposal is muddy and how it could be fixed. Disadvantage: loses the checks and balances involved in the current system (though I have never seen them needed). What do you think? Thanks for your kindness, Jonathan -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-policy-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20111128075831.gd2...@elie.hsd1.il.comcast.net