Title: Consensus decision making:
1Consensus decision making the basics
23920 Autonomous Geographies, Sustainable
Futures SCHOOL OF GEOGRAPHY
Consensus decision making principles
- No one is more qualified than you are to make
decisions about your life - You should have power to influence a decision in
proportion to the impact that decision will have
on you - Needs prior commitment from everyone to making a
fair decision - Dialogue between equals it is NOT adversarial
politics - Taking account of everyones needs giving real
commitment to final decision - Finding solutions that everyone can live with
- Working with each other - not for or against each
other - Attempts to avoid tyranny of the majority
where minority views are lost - Power of veto for the marginalised - not to avoid
deadlock or create compromise - Can work in small and large groups
- Not problem free or a dogma to be use at all
costs it is contextual
33920 Autonomous Geographies, Sustainable
Futures SCHOOL OF GEOGRAPHY
Problems
- Those with more experience can manipulate the
outcome. - Existing policies remain in place if no decision
is reached. - Time commitment leading to frustration and
weaker commitment. - The right to veto can be a lethal tool and open
to abuse - Those who know more about an issue will have more
power - Without a common aim a deep understanding and
respect for consensus is less likely. - Balancing personal and collective freedom how
are they linked?
4Guidelines for consensus
- Be respectful and trust each other. Don't be
afraid to express your ideas and opinions. - Don't assume that someone must win and someone
must lose. Look for the most acceptable solution
for everyone. - Think before you speak, listen before you object.
Listen to others reactions, and consider them
carefully before pressing your point. - Remember that the ideal behind consensus is
empowering not overpowering, agreement not
majorities/minorities.
5Conditions for Consensus
6Typical Consensus Process
7Dealing with disagreements
- The major objection (block or veto)
- The minor objection (stand aside)
- Agree to disagree no agreement (what are risks)
- The Fridge Put the decision on ice for an hour
or day - Back-up options
- Allow the person most concerned to make the
decision. - Put all the possibilities into a hat and pull one
out. - Majority voting as a backup
- Leaving the group
8Facilitating the meeting
- Good facilitation key
- Little emotional investment in the issues
discussed. - Energy and attention for the job at hand.
- Understanding of tasks for the meeting as well as
long-term goals of the group. - Good listening skills to be able to understand
everyone's viewpoint properly. - Confidence that good solutions will be found and
consensus can be achieved. - Assertiveness that is not overbearing
- Respect for all participants and interest in what
each individual has to offer. - Clear thinking observation of the whole group.
- Attend both to the content of the discussion and
the process and emotions
9Meeting roles
- All optional or merge-able
- Facilitator
- Co-facilitator (for large meetings)
- Minute taker
- Time keeper
- Speaker-hand taker
- Welcomer-doorkeeper
- Vibes watcher!
10Tools for meetings
- Beforehand
- Training
- Setting up the venue (make a list of tasks)
- Group agreements and ground rules
- Clear agenda
- Use of hand signals (see slide)
- Making a decision
- Go rounds
- Ideas storm
- Straw polls temperature checks
- Pros and cons
- Plus-minus-interesting
- Taking breaks
- At end
- Evaluation
11Tools hand signals
12Consensus exercise In groups of around 12, use
the proposal structure to decide how you will
plan a group night out. Remember the idea is to
generate proposals and reach a decision that you
have consensus on and that you can implement
13Resources
- Seeds for Change www.seedsforchange.org.uk
- Trapese www.trapese.org
- Handbook For Change www.handbookforchange.org