Consensus Decision Making
What is consensus?
Consensus is a process for group
decision-making. It is a method by which an entire group of people
can come to an agreement. The input and ideas of all participants
are gathered and synthesized to arrive at a final decision acceptable
to all. Through consensus, we are not only working to achieve
better solutions, but also to promote the growth of community
and trust.
Consensus vs. voting
Voting is a means by which we
choose one alternative from several. Consensus, on the other hand,
is a process of synthesizing many diverse elements together.
Voting is a win or lose model, in which people are more often
concerned with the numbers it takes to "win" than with
the issue itself. Voting does not take into account individual
feelings or needs. In essence, it is a quantitative, rather than
qualitative, method of decision-making.
With consensus people can and should work through differences
and reach a mutually satisfactory position. It is possible for
one person's insights or strongly held beliefs to sway the whole
group. No ideas are lost, each member's input is valued as part
of the solution.
A group committed to consensus may utilize other forms of decision
making (individual, compromise, majority rules) when appropriate;
however, a group that has adopted a consensus model will use that
process for any item that brings up a lot of emotions, is something
that concerns people's ethics, politics, morals or other areas
where there is much investment.
What does consensus mean?
Consensus does not mean that everyone
thinks that the decision made is necessarily the best one possible,
or even that they are sure it will work. What it does mean is
that in coming to that decision, no one felt that her/his position
on the matter was misunderstood or that it wasn't given a proper
hearing. Hopefully, everyone will think it is the best decision;
this often happens because, when it works, collective intelligence
does come up with better solutions than could individuals.
Consensus takes more time and member skill, but uses lots of resources
before a decision is made, creates commitment to the decision
and often facilitates creative decision. It gives everyone some
experience with new processes of interaction and conflict resolution,
which is basic but important skill-building. For consensus to
be a positive experience, it is best if the group has 1) common
values, 2) some skill in group process and conflict resolution,
or a commitment to let these be facilitated, 3) commitment and
responsibility to the group by its members and 4) sufficient time
for everyone to participate in the process.
Forming the consensus proposals
During discussion a proposal for
resolution is put forward. It is amended and modified through
more discussion, or withdrawn if it seems to be a dead end. During
this discussion period it is important to articulate differences
clearly. It is the responsibility of those who are having trouble
with a proposal to put forth alternative suggestions.
The fundamental right of consensus is for all people to be able
to express themselves in their own words and of their own will.
The fundamental responsibility of consensus is to assure others
of their right to speak and be heard. Coercion and trade-offs
are replaced with creative alternatives, and compromise with synthesis.
When a proposal seems to be well understood by everyone, and there
are no new changes asked for, the facilitator(s) can ask if there
are any objections or reservations to it. If there are no objections,
there can be a call for consensus. If there are still no objections,
then after a moment of silence you have your decision. Once consensus
does appear to have been reached, it really helps to have someone
repeat the decision to the group so everyone is clear on what
has been decided.
Difficulties in reaching consensus
If a decision has been reached, or is on the verge of being reached that you cannot support, there are several ways to express your objections:
Non-support ("I don't see the need for this, but I'll go along.")
Reservations ('I think this may be a mistake but I can live with it.")
Standing aside ("I personally can't do this, but I won't stop others from doing it. ")
Blocking ("I cannot support this or allow the group to support this. It is immoral." If a final decision violates someone's fundamental moral values they are obligated to block consensus.)
Withdrawing from the group. Obviously, if many people express non-support or reservations or stand aside or leave the group, it may not be a viable decision even if no one directly blocks it. This is what is known as a "lukewarm" consensus and it is just as desirable as a lukewarm beer or a lukewarm bath.
If consensus is blocked and no new consensus can be reached, the
group stays with whatever the previous decision was on the subject,
or does nothing if that is applicable. Major philosophical or
moral questions that will come up with each affinity group will
have to be worked through as soon as the group forms.
Roles in a consensus meeting
There are several roles which,
if filled, can help consensus decision making run smoothly. The
facilitator(s) aids the group in defining decisions that need
to be made, helps them through the stages of reaching an agreement,
keeps the meeting moving, focuses discussion to the point-at hand;
makes sure everyone has the opportunity to participate, and formulates
and tests to see if consensus has been reached. Facilitators help
to direct the process of the meeting, not its content. They never
make decisions for the group. If a facilitator feels too emotionally
involved in an issue or discussion and cannot remain neutral in
behavior, if not in attitude, then s/he should ask someone to
take over the task of facilitation for that agenda item.
A vibes-watcher is someone besides the facilitator who watches
and comments on individual and group feelings and patterns of
participation. Vibes-watchers need to be especially tuned in to
the sexism of group dynamics.
A recorder can take notes on the meeting, especially of decisions
made and means of implementation and a time-keeper keeps things
going on schedule so that each agenda item can be covered in the
time allotted for it (if discussion runs over the time for an
item, the group may or may not decide to contract for more time
to finish up).
Even though individuals take on these roles, all participants
in a meeting should be aware of and involved in the issues, process,
and feelings of the group, and should share their individual expertise
in helping the group run smoothly and reach a decision. This is
especially true when it comes to finding compromise agreements
to seemingly contradictory positions.
ACT UP Direct Action Guidelines
History of Mass Nonviolent Action
Nonviolent Response to Personal Violence
Practicing Nonviolence
Nonviolence Training
Affinity Groups and Support
Steps Toward Making a Campaign
Consensus Decision Making
Legal Issues/Risking Arrest
Legal Flow Chart: What Happens in an Arrest and Your Decisions
Legal Terms: What They Mean
Jail Solidaritysee also the following:
The Demonstrator's Manual (crucial)
Marshal Training Manual
Getting Arrested: Why do we do it?