![]() | These guides represent the thoughts of their authors. All individually written voter guides are eligible for inclusion. |
Disclaimer: This page expresses my personal opinions and observations only. I encourage all voters to do their own research on the candidates.
For those who aren't sure what this is about: The Arbitration Committee is part of the Wikipedia dispute resolution process. In fact, ArbCom is pretty much the last stop. For a general real world analogy, ArbCom is sort of like the Supreme Court of Wikipedia. The arbitrators don't make decisions on article content, but they do issue rulings on complex disputes relating to user conduct, and they have considerable authority within the wiki-culture. Members of the committee are usually elected for two-year terms (sometimes one or three), with a new batch elected each year.
In August/September 2015, an RfC took place concerning the format of the 2015 elections, at Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Arbitration Committee Elections December 2015.
Candidates self-nominated from November 8 to November 17, and the voting period ran from November 23 to December 6. results were posted on December 9th. For details on voting eligibility, see the 2015 election page.
For this 2015/2016 cycle, seven of the 15 arbitrators remained on the committee from previous elections, with eight new arbitrators elected to 2-year terms, and one to a 1-year term.
This page that you are reading, contained my (Elonka's) thoughts on the 2015 crop of ArbCom candidates. My general standards for a candidate are: admin access, integrity, experience with article-writing, time-available for the project, and hands-on knowledge of the dispute resolution processes. I am also a strong supporter of civility, as I believe that rude behavior on the project can drive away other editors, and I would hope that ArbCom would help support that view; however, I also understand that not everyone has the same feelings about civility, so I am willing to support arbitrator candidates for other reasons than just that one.
To see my thoughts on previous elections, check the history of:
![]() | These guides represent the thoughts of their authors. All individually written voter guides are eligible for inclusion. |