Annapolis Valley Register

Consensus decision-making effective in both communitie­s and workplaces

- MEL RUTHERFORD THECONVERS­ATION.COM

If you’re in a leadership position — at work or in the community — you make decisions and oversee decision-making processes. Often it’s best to consult the people you are leading to reach a group decision. Voting may seem the quickest route to a resolution, but it isn’t the best way to enrol everyone. Worse, voting can silence voices and thwart creativity.

Formal consensus decision-making leads to broader engagement. I have been training leaders in formal consensus decision-making for more than 25 years, and here’s why I recommend it.

CIRCLE OF MORAL CONCERN

Slowing down your decision-making process and listening deeply to the people in your group also increases how much you care for them and how much you view them as people.

As a professor of psychology, neuroscien­ce and behaviour, in the Rutherford lab at McMaster University, my students and I study the perception of social categories.

My students and I are interested in learning how people can increase their circle of moral concern. When people behave in ways that harm others, they may not be including those others in the circle of people they care about. The deep listening involved in formal consensus decision-making draws people into that circle.

EXPERTISE IN THE GROUP

If a problem is difficult, if there is expertise in your group that can inform and improve the decision at issue, or if a solution is going to be expensive, it’s a good time to consider a broad, robust decision-making process.

Perhaps the most critical times to use a durable consensus decisionma­king process are when a decision is going to be controvers­ial, or if the success of the decision relies on enthusiast­ic acceptance.

I suggest a specific model called formal consensus decision-making, in which no proposal is adopted until every concern is heard, understood and addressed. This model, complete with charts, roles and procedures, was developed by Food Not Bombs, a volunteer organizati­on dedicated to nonviolent social change.

Political science researcher Sean Michael Parsons discusses the formation of Food Not Bombs in his 2010 dissertati­on. He points to how historian Barbara Epstein discusses the relationsh­ip between 1960s movements (which shaped the politics and habits of Food Not Bombs) and Quakers.

In the Quaker religion, Quakers do not vote, but rely on “communal discernmen­t” — listening for a truth that emerges when people listen to one another and together “in the Spirit.”

BUILDING CONSENSUS IN A UNIVERSITY

More than a year ago, I became chair of McMaster University’s department of psychology, neuroscien­ce and behaviour. Since then, the department has not voted once.

My department uses formal consensus decision-making, and instead of policies, we have standard operating procedures. Where other department­s have policies, bylaws and governance documents, we wanted something different, because creating bylaws can be contentiou­s, enforcing bylaws can be worse and bylaws can’t anticipate unanticipa­ted situations.

Instead, we now use a living document simply called, “This is how we do it.” This document was not ratified by vote. It was reviewed by the entire department in a process where we analyzed how we currently did things and how we hoped to change — a “gap analysis” process.

If you’re wondering how to get a group to agree to any kind of governance document without voting, let me tell you the story of how we ratified our “This is how we do it” document without taking a single vote.

IDENTIFYIN­G VALUES

First, we created a core values statement, and today we measure all our practices and procedures against it. We started our core-values exercise in January with four large group meetings: faculty, staff, post-doctoral research fellows, graduate students and undergradu­ate students.

Representa­tives from each group met with our facilitato­r, who distilled the data she collected during those sessions, specifical­ly the values that had been nominated in each meeting for every domain we discussed.

Finally, a small working group including representa­tion from each of the large groups met to draft our core values statement. This draft went to the entire department with a request for feedback. After a final meeting of representa­tives, the core values were finalized.

Next, we had a faculty retreat to develop our “This is how we do it” document. In small groups and all together, we examined and discussed the fit between our department’s core values and this document.

We used notes from all discussion­s at the retreat to update the document and circulated it to the department for further comment. Now we have our way forward.

MAJOR BODIES USING CONSENSUS

In Canada, some major organizati­ons are taking more inclusive and deliberati­ve decision-making seriously. There are even two government­al bodies in Canada that have a consensus style of government, Nunavut, and the Northwest Territorie­s.

LISTEN TO DISSENT

Voting can silence voices. You may have been in a meeting at some point when a disagreeme­nt broke out and someone angrily suggested, “Let’s take a vote!”

All too often, that can be a way to silence dissent.

Why not try consensus at home, in your workplace, your church or faith community or your running club?

Mel Rutherford is professor and department chair, psychology, neuroscien­ce and behaviour, McMaster University.

 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? Voting silences voices. Listening deeply to people in your group leads to more robust and better decisions.
SHUTTERSTO­CK Voting silences voices. Listening deeply to people in your group leads to more robust and better decisions.

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