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Arbitration Committee is important both in what it does and does not; on the most basic and important level, its decisions, for better or worse, shape who is allowed to build an encyclopedia. Ensuring that the sitting committee is as committed to the goal of building an encyclopedia as possible is, I believe, the duty of every wiki citizen. And here you have what I see as the first important quality of a good arbitrator: experience in content creation (this can be quickly judged by this counter, with the obvious disclaimer that numbers are never the whole story).
Not all content creators are good ArbCom material, of course. Experience can be used wisely - or wasted. What I consider a wise use of one's experience here is understanding that it is easy to ban/block an editor - but it is much more difficult (yet much more beneficial to the project) to reform them. We don't need more "banhammer-happy" arbitrators (or administrators); not every problem is a nail in need of being hammered, and making a desert and calling it peace is not going to help this project. Without going into this in too much detail for what is supposed to be a brief intro to my candidate guide, I believe there is a positive correlation between banhammer-friendly attitude among wiki arbitrators (and administrators) and the stabilization in the number of active English Wikipedia editors. Too trigger-happy applications of bans, instead of attempting to mentor or reform editors, is making them leave (or radicalize and become sock-using vandals and such). While this deserves serious academic attention, my cursory look at Polish Wikipedia's ArbCom suggests that that Wikipedia can solve its problems with very few bans or blocks (and while at this point I do not have date on its editor trends compared to the English one, at the very least, being the 4th biggest in the world, it is not doing bad, and its article growth trend looks at least as good as ours). There is, I believe, a certain comparison to be made between English Wikipedia, being (for obvious reasons) heavily influenced by the editors from the United States background, and the inefficient US penal system (did you know that US has the world's highest incarceration rate...?). But I digress :)
Activity is another important factor. Too many cases drag too long, too often parties don't receive timely (or any) responses to their queries. A good arbitrator should be very active (edits/day, active editing days/year), and should have a good record of responding to queries (sadly, this is difficult to track; for sitting arbitrators we really need a "contact this arbitrator" button which would keep track of "queries replied to"... but I digress here again).
(Taken from AGK's disclaimer) This guide contains my personal views on the candidatures of this year's elections. Although written in good faith, it is derived from my biases and experiences. All voters should consider this and all other guides with extreme care, and should base their votes on their own estimations of a candidate's suitability to sit on the Committee.
(And now for something more personal)) My experience with the Committee dates to this 2005 case. While I have never filled in a case, I have observed several, been a party to others, and been subject to several remedies. Those experiences are a two-edged sword: on the constructive side, I am quite familiar with how the Committee works, yet still a relative outsider to the wikipolitics-power-structure; but on the less-then-constructive side, those very same personal experiences have biased me, both positively and negatively, towards certain procedural and personal elements of the Arbitration process (so, caveat lector - you have been warned).
I have decided to limit my reviews to clear endorsements only, for the reason I elaborate on here, and that can be curtly summed up as "I do not feel comfortable with publicly criticizing editors who may in future hold the wiki-equivalent of life or death power over me." Further, I will also add that with regard to majority of candidates I hold no strong feelings either way (but for obvious reasons, I cannot include them, or my above statement becomes pointless...).
I have decided to strongly endorse the following candidates (5 stars out of 5: ):
All of the above candidates are in a very small group of arbitrators who have replied (respectfully, meaningfully) to nearly all wiki email or talk post message I have send them over they years.
I am also weakly endorsing the following candidates (4 stars out of 5: ):
On a final note, good luck to you all. If you win, may you handle the responsibility with the utmost respect it requires, --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| talk 00:10, 30 November 2010 (UTC)
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