User:Sam Blacketer/RfA reform

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Reforming Requests for Adminship[edit]

The problem that needs fixing[edit]

The key problem with RfA that too many people have identified is that although it is formally 'not a vote', it is a vote in effect and in practice. The second problem is that oppose notvotes are cast for reasons which have little importance on Any replacement needs to move away from a system of pure votes. However, it does need to offer an opportunity for editors at large to evaluate a candidate's editing to assess whether they are likely to fall into any of the problem areas for admins.

Reform proposal[edit]

The system I have in mind would involve an expanded list of questions to ask the candidate in more detail about their contributions and how they see themselves fitting in. Then, instead of asking editors to support or oppose, editors would be asked to assess the candidate's contributions in several different aspects. That might fall into these divisions (this is just an example):

  • Article writing
  • Interactions with other Wikipedians
  • Contributions to Wikipedia internal debates
  • Vandal-fighting and cleanup
  • Miscellaneous

Editor comments[edit]

Instead of 'support' or 'oppose', editors judging the candidate would comment on whether the candidate's contributions in each area were worthy of commendation or indicated unsuitability. They could add, if they wanted, a recommendation to the closing bureaucrat that the candidate had such serious problems that they should not be promoted.

Conclusion of debate[edit]

At the end of the debate, the bureaucrat would ascertain whether any problems with the candidate taken overall made them unsuitable, not by counting numbers but by qualitative assessment. The way this might work is that the candidate who registered an account last week and has 10 edits would fail almost immediately, as now. The candidate who has no involvement with copyright checking but has good experience in everything else would pass because they can pick that experience up later if they need to. The candidate who edits controversial articles and is inevitably accused of bias and targeted by trolls, will pass if it is clear they react calmly.

Issues[edit]

I recognise this proposal vastly increases the discretion of the corps of bureaucrats but that would probably be inevitable in any change. I am not suggesting that RfB procedure should be changed. Sam Blacketer 20:23, 7 April 2007 (UTC)