I've been asked to give a speech and to write an article about principles
for workplace democracy, for coworking as small villages, and would value
your feedback/questions/suggestions. 6 principles are below, after 2
paragraphs of intro.

I think there are 4 categories of coworking places, and this might be
helpful for one of the types, which I call 'workplace democracies'; another
way to define them are places where the ideal is to 'work alongside other
people, who are doing a variety of work.' (the ideal for this type of
coworking place isn't to work in private offices, and the ideal for most
members isn't to work alongside 'like-minded people').

Are these all true requirements for democracies, or are some specific
choices and not principles? Are they grouped in ways that make sense? Is
more context needed? Does this define what "democracy" is? (Each could be
rated on a scale of 1 to 5, where 5 is completely, 1 is not at all, 3 is
somewhat, all the scores of the questions could be averaged, and then a
country or business or relationship could be categorized by how much of a
democracy it is or isn't. I think the U.S. governance scores pretty low on
this, and some workplace democracies and co-ops and coworking places score
very high.)

Principles for Democracy:
1. RESOURCES ORGANIZED BY THE DEMOCRACY'S MEMBERS: No individual has the
right to inflict harm upon others or to destroy or lessen resources which
should be available to all. The democracy is an autonomous, self-help
organization responsible to its members. If they enter into agreements with
other organizations, including governments, or raise capital from external
sources, they do so on terms that ensure democratic responsibility to their
members and maintain their autonomy.
2. EQUAL TREATMENT: Everybody is treated the same when we’re here, with the
same access to everything (unless it is delegated through a public process
involving transparency and consent, such as fees for services or private
ownership, a process that sets explicit, transparent, public limits on how
things work and how people can participate; does not have implicit or
hidden rules or processes for determining or excluding people or things).
3. BEING GOOD HUMANS: People own responsibility for their actions, hold
each other accountable and, if needed, confront with respect (how you’d
like to be confronted).
4. HAVING INITIATIVE: People ask for and/or make happen the things they
very much want, in ways that are considerate of other people.
5. GIVING CONTEXT: Decisions and limits that affect other people have
accessible why’s and context. There are regular accessible check-ins on
things that anyone likely very much cares about, and on democracy. Laws are
publicly written down and understandable, along with other constraints on
decisions that any person might very much want to know (finances,
operations, governance processes, etc).
6. PLURALITY: There is freedom of speech and association. There is freedom
of travel and choice of residence, employment, and education.

Thanks!

Alex
--
Alex Linsker | Business Owner
Collective Agency <http://collectiveagency.co>
(503) 517-6900 office | (503) 369-9174 mobile
322 NW Sixth Ave, Suite 200 | Portland, Oregon 97209

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