Wikipedia talk:Requests for arbitration/Ireland article namesStatements by uninvolved editors at WP:RfArStatement by SirFozzieI do not endorse this, while this is somewhat related to one of the key disputes of The Troubles (exactly what the Ireland article should point to, the island, the Republic of Ireland, so on and so forth). There was a Requested Move discussion that is the root of this. You notice that there is no diffs of user conduct in the request for Arbitration, only a demand that ArbCom provide an answer to what the Ireland article should point to. I would recommend that instead of yet again fighting over these issues in Arbitration and attempting to bring it here to win a content dispute by brute (ArbCom) force, that they go back and not come back until they get it right. SirFozzie (talk) 21:47, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
I see that Rockpocket has posted several diffs of user conduct by various folks that had the effect of inflaming discussion and making finding consensus much more difficult. I would support a limited case, aimed at (and only at) looking at the examples of user conduct that break Wikipedia policies, and then see what the people can do when the worst actors are removed. SirFozzie (talk) 22:00, 3 December 2008 (UTC) Statement by Jza84I too, like Snowded, endorse the the comments by Evertype. We need a solution, or rather a formal decision, on how to take this forwards. My findings are:
I'm not listed as in involved party, but I have dipped my toes in Irish/British geography issues from time-to-time. Again, my main concern is that the debates need to be closed for the good of Wikipedia now. We need a strong, tough decision to be made and respected. --Jza84 | Talk 21:53, 2 December 2008 (UTC) Statement by TariqabjotuI don't know why I'm named as an "involved" party, especially as number two, just below the person who opened this request, and just above everyone else, who is rightfully named in alphabetical order. I closed a move request. Half of the people -- not unexpectedly -- didn't like that. After barraging my page with comments, they went to ANI and eventually got the move reversed. Okay... I'm not complaining. I have no problem with getting a move overturned that other uninvolved (let me repeat, uninvolved) people generally think was wrong. I believe the current result is more precarious than the one I (unsuccessfully) implemented, but I am not bothered at all by the reversal. So... 'involved' is not appropriate here at all; I have no opinion on the positions in this debate. -- tariqabjotu 22:50, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
Statement by peripherally involved RockpocketI don't think ArbCom can, or should, decide which article resides at which title. I do think ArbCom could, perhaps, put some enforceable remedies in place to assist those willing to discuss, negotiate and compromise in good faith, and deter those ideologues, banned editors and agitators who see this as another battleground in the ongoing British/Irish Troubles.
I therefore urge ArbCom to consider hearing this with a view towards issuing a remedy, like the one resulting from the Troubles ArbCom, than will help foster an environment where this can be resolved by good faith editors. Rockpocket 01:59, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
Statement by SrnecCan't we just limit how quickly a new move request may be filed after a previous one was closed, then allow the issue of naming to be revisited as often as some parties like through the normal route (WP:RM)? Discussion about a move that requires the moving of other pages should be centralised at the appropriate article (Talk:Ireland in this case). Starting from the status quo ante recently reinstated by Deacon, we can allow a move request—one move request—to be filed any time now, but impose a limit on how much time must elapse before the issue can be revisited once the latest request has been closed. I think it is perfectly appropriate that the issue be constantly revisited, semper reformanda. It just needs to be allowed to lie fallow for a time, and discussion must be centralised at Talk:Ireland whenever that article is implicated in the move request. This solution is purely procedural. A minimum wait time between moves would only have to be chosen: 3, 6, 12 months, or more. Srnec (talk) 03:04, 3 December 2008 (UTC) Statement by Eluchil404I'm honestly not sure what ArbCom is being asked to arbutrate here. The the article naming scheme here is contentious is not in doubt but not concrete issues of edit-warring or incivility have been cited. Even if an Arb backed "final decision process" was started, I don't see how it could be truly final given the constant turnover of editors who will naturally wonder why whichever scheme we pick deviates from what they consider natural and correct, and the simple fact that consensus can change. ArbCom and the community simple lack the power the bind future communities from making different decisions, though they can counsel against it for reasons of stability. I urge rejection on the gorunds that no usefull remedies can be adopted. If there were a content or naming dispute court of last resort this could be sent there but ArbCom is not the place for it. Eluchil404 (talk) 03:29, 3 December 2008 (UTC) Statement by NarsonI'm not mentioned as a party here but have been involved in the past loosely and over the past few days. I do think an arbcom looking at the issues, and not at the editors, would be an excellent thing. Though I am not sure if that is within the remit of ArbCom, to focus just on the content/issues at hand. I was hoping a fresh RM could just be run rather than this going but people do seem to be at what you might call 'fever pitch' and this is a better option than letting people go crazy and get themselves blocked. Certainly the idea of a limit as to the time between move requests on these pages would be appreciaed, just to stop it flipping back and forth or in the constant grind it is in now. --Narson ~ Talk • 10:25, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
Statement by JodyBI ask the arbitrators to note that there has been no dispute resolution apart from the talk page. The involvement of editors outside the current troubled group should be attempted first before Arbcom becomes involved. There is no reason to leap-frog the well established principle of attempting dispute resolution fully before coming here. JodyB talk 11:44, 3 December 2008 (UTC) Statement by StifleI would hope that the ArbCom accepts this case; if nothing else, there may have been improper use of admin rights (protection and moving protected pages). Stifle (talk) 11:37, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
Statement by uninvolved KosebamseAnother classic example of User:Moreschi/The Plague. Seeing that conflicts of this type have afflicted Wikipedia since its inception, it might be time to reconsider policies. Wikipedia:Don't even think about getting passionate over nationalist topics or you'll get blocked without further discussion, perhaps? Kosebamse (talk) 15:40, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
Statement by PalestineRememberedDear ArbCom - please treat this in a regular fashion as a conduct issue. Find some way to score and rank and test editors on their fitness to contribute to and take this decision themselves. Make sure that the yard-sticks used concern scholarship more than civility (which is too often a cover for gaming). Think product more than process and thereby lay the ground for better articles everywhere. A solution along these lines will save you hours of ongoing and escalating aggravation at other ethnic-based topic disputes. PRtalk 17:44, 3 December 2008 (UTC) Statement from uninvolved David GerardThis swung by wikien-l before it came here. It looked to a lot of people there somewhat closer to an ethnic POV-pushing issue, rather than a plain content issue per se. For what that's worth. The person who brought it to foundation-l and then came to wikien-l for (quite civil and flame-free, I must note) discussion considers that ethnic POV-pushing is going on in this case. Beyond that, the basic advice was "think of the readers, not the involved editors" for the content issue, and he claimed that that ideal wasn't happening for whatever reason - David Gerard (talk) 16:34, 4 December 2008 (UTC) Statement by Hemlock MartinisI urge the arbitrators not to reject this as a content issue. While the underlying issue is one of content, the main issue here is the manner by which the content was changed. I'm hesitant to call this an ethnic POV-pushing case, but I do feel the manner in which the articles were renamed was counter to the wiki process by isolating it from a general discussion area and into an insular forum in which a hivemind became apparent. I concur with Jza84's statement in that country names are essential to the stability of the encyclopedia since changing them can have widespread ramifications for the community and the encyclopedia. As such, it should be done carefully, with much forethought and plenty of public discourse and preparation. Not doing so disrupts the encyclopedia. ArbCom needs to approach it from that angle, and disassociate itself from the content issues themselves. --Hemlock Martinis (talk) 18:58, 4 December 2008 (UTC) Plea by User:DrKiernanI would plea with Bainer and Forrester, or the new arbitrators, to accept this case. I almost brought one here myself. The constant rehashing of the same old arguments, and the constant re-nominations for page moves, is disruptive, or at least, a wasteful time-sink that will achieve nothing. There is no hope at all that this dispute can be resolved by the normal methods of discussing page names. Though there are concerns about the way the last set of moves were performed (by a rough count I count 50% more opposes than supports at the discussions on the article talk pages and yet the pages were still moved), I would recommend a ruling from ArbCom along the following lines:
(*delete as appropriate) Statement by User:Domer48I would have to agree with most of the editors above in the hope that arbitrators accept this case. I will add my rational later today, thanks --Domer48'fenian' 10:49, 5 December 2008 (UTC) Statement by SilkTorkSome of this matter came to MedCab - Wikipedia:Mediation Cabal/Cases/2008-08-11 British Isles Terminology task force - though nothing came of that as the two players in that case couldn't agree to work together. Content disputes are often difficult, but in the process of dispute and discussion the community finds from within a workable solution. Solutions imposed by an external body are inappropriate, which is why ArbCom is discouraged from dealing with content disputes. Calls for a solution simply to end the personal pain of those involved in the dispute are not what Wikipedia is about. The way that this request has been formulated does not lend itself to acceptance by ArbCom as it is worded simply as a content dispute that the parties wish someone else "in authority" to end. That's a damn slippery slope if ArbCom accepts this. I would urge ArbCom to reject this request as it stands and ask Evertype or some other concerned party to redraft it so that it is clear the request is to examine misconduct of named individuals, and that diffs are given as evidence of that misconduct and of attempts through proper dispute resolution channels to resolve and remedy that misconduct. SilkTork *YES! 23:43, 5 December 2008 (UTC)
Comment by GaillimhThis has to be settled properly. If you type in "Ireland" on the Googles, the Wikipedia entries for Ireland and Republic of Ireland are the first two results. We definitely need to get the naming conventions back to how they are recognised worldwide. When people think of Ireland, they don't think of the landmass, they think of the country. It's not a political issue; it's simple naming conventions. All of this "Northern" political chatter is going to be moot in the next decade or so anyways given the current voting trends in the North (i.e. a referendum will successfully be put forth in the North to unify with the Southern twenty-six counties). gaillimhConas tá tú? 20:30, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
UpdateDiscussion is ongoing on the task force talk page. There is now a proposal being debated which, while not guaranteed of a consensus, has the active or provisional support of a considerable number of people from both sides of the debate - the first time this has happened. Again, it may not settle all the issues, but if implemented it may considerably reduce the perceived need for outside intervention. Scolaire (talk) 17:25, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
Comment by uninvolved J.delanoyOver the past few months, while on patrolling for vandalism with Huggle, I have on many occasions seen various new users and IPs unilaterally change scores of instances of "Ireland" (referring to the sovereign country, not the island) to Republic of Ireland. Each time I see this, I am unsure whether to revert or not. My uncertainty seems to be echoed by many, many other users who patrol recent changes, since it is usually quite some time before anyone takes any action. A few weeks ago, I decided to take a look at some of the discussion surrounding this. Unfortunately, I have neither the time nor the necessary mental abilities to effectively engage in a dispute of this magnitude. I would like to encourage the Committee to accept this case. I would also appreciate the Committee including in their decision a note specifying how the geographical island and the sovereign country, respectively, should be referred to in articles which are tangentially related to the subject. If nothing else, this would allow vandal fighters to know for sure whether or not to take action in the situation outlined above. J.delanoygabsadds 03:21, 9 December 2008 (UTC) DiscussionStatements on project pageAre the 'Statements' on the project page and this talk page preserved as a record of the original request, or can they be completely rewritten at this stage? Many editors, including me, confined their statements to the question of whether the case should be taken, or whether it should be taken as a content or a conduct issue. I would like to re-write my statement as a proper statement of my case, but is this considered okay? Scolaire (talk) 09:14, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
Where does the discussion referred to in Remedy 1 take place?Part of the problem is that previous discussions took place in multiple locations, sometimes simultaneously, sometimes not, and they were not always well advertised. It would be helpful, I think, if Arbcom were to designate one place where Remedy 1 (and Remedy 2 if necessary) should be discussed - after proper advertising. Possible candidates (there may be more) are, in no particular order: Thanks. BastunBaStun not BaTsun 10:21, 4 January 2009 (UTC)
A new discussion page should be set up in Wikipedia space for this purpose, with a link at the top to this decision. Neutrally worded, non-argumentative notices of the discussion may be placed in the locations listed above and in any other appropriate locations. Please post a link here as well. If the page is not created within the next day or so, one of the arbitrators will set it up, but I think we had assumed that interested parties would get things going on their own. I hope that everyone can please keep the discussion focused, on-topic, and civil. Newyorkbrad (talk) 11:25, 7 January 2009 (UTC)
Ireland article names: Request for Remedy 2The case was closed on 2009-01-04. Attempts to achieve consensus regarding Remedy 1 began shortly thereafter. It is now 2009-01-18, and no consensus has been achieved. Will the ArbCom now proceed with Remedy 2, please? -- Evertype·✆ 10:14, 18 January 2009 (UTC)
Admin moderatorsThe admin assistance has started. So far we have two commitments: User:SebastianHelm and User:Edokter. We'll keep looking for a third helper. — Rlevse • Talk • 02:14, 30 January 2009 (UTC)
Ireland article names: Request for HELP from ArbComThe Admin Moderators have BOTH resigned. Please appoint new ones. -- Evertype·✆ 07:51, 3 May 2009 (UTC) Request to amend prior case Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Ireland article namesStatement by DrKiernanThe process to develop a procedure for deciding Ireland article names has stalled. All three moderators have resigned. However, options for the next phase of the process have been suggested. I would summarise the comments of those editors participating in the current discussion of the options on the wikiproject talk page as: Approve option 1 (or a version of it):
OK with option 1:
Oppose option 1:
Concerned with option 1:
That's at least a two-thirds majority in favour of trying option 1. I ask:
Clerk notesArbitrator views and discussion
Request to amend prior case: Ireland article namesList of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:
Statement by MickMacNee
Statement by SarekOfVulcanSecond this request. Part of Domer's argument for not being blocked was that ArbCom never said the individual article talkpages couldn't be used to discuss changing the name/focus of the individual articles. If the ArbCom could make it clear whether or not their intent was to move all discussion concerning page names/focuses into the location specified pursuant to remedy 2, that would be most useful. I think that confining discussion is the right thing to do, because we don't need half the articles working one way and half another.--SarekOfVulcan (talk) 19:00, 3 June 2009 (UTC)
Statement by BigDuncThis shows that Sarek was telling factual inaccuracies, this is what Domer had asked to be shown and Sarek claimed was already in place when he blocked Domer. Sarek also claimed on ANI that it was in place it appears he/she was mistaken. BigDuncTalk 19:16, 3 June 2009 (UTC) Also for the record I oppose this what we need is a kick start to get it up and running again. And maybe the Domer debacle has done that. BigDuncTalk 22:41, 4 June 2009 (UTC)
Statement by RockpocketI also urge ArbCom to be be explicit in their instructions for how this dispute should (and should not) be resolved. Sadly there are efforts to subvert the current process by forum shopping, with the apparent aim if creating a false consensus. That has been supported by claims that ArbCom did not explicitly put in place a structure for resolution and that ArbCom did not explicitly prohibit discussions from individual article talk pages. These claims are technically accurate, but clearly not in the spirit of the remedies ArbCom did pass. This could be resolved with a simple amendment stating the discussion should take place at a single centralized forum. Rockpocket 20:43, 3 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by Deacon of PndapetzimThis dispute is still running because the method ArbCom set up for resolving this was ineffective and collapsed, and contrary to the emerging norm of ArbCom practice in such areas, the hot-heads of the dispute didn't get topic banned and are continuing to ensure everything's as tendentious, partisan and heated as ever. No consensus will be built here by discussion. I pointed this out before, now I have been proven correct. What has to be done now is the process I recommended two months ago, per Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Ireland_Collaboration#Moderator_action_..._next_step and Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Ireland_Collaboration#Building on what we have done so far and getting to a conclusion, a process that got the support of the most respectable editors participating. A decisive result would be produced, and though its results wouldn't please everyone, it would have a legitimacy lacking now. I propose the poll be moderated by Coren, who I propose because I think he is the arbitrator best cut out to deal with it and the likely nonsense. An arb is a preferential appointment because his authority is most likely to be respected, so I think one should be the nominal head even if he has deputies doing most of the actual work. Deacon of Pndapetzim (Talk) 15:00, 4 June 2009 (UTC)
I've opened a proposal page at Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Ireland article names/Community poll. Deacon of Pndapetzim (Talk) 23:14, 4 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by GoodDayPersonally, I'd like to see all the Arbitrators get together & decide via simple majority vote on a ruling for these articles. GoodDay (talk) 15:33, 4 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by HighKingThe current process does not take into consideration the lack of incentive by some editors to allow a process (that will result in changes they don't agree with) to proceed. So they simply delay the process, slow it down, stick heels in, and are happy with a stagnant process. And you'd be surprised at how few editors it takes to achieve this. The current process and method requires a number of changes. Another point is that in general, weight of numbers also appears to sway arguments much more than the quality of the arguments and discussions, so having a senior arbitrator (or more than one) involved in order to actually make decisions and give directions is required. This should be (mutually, whatever) agreed up front, that the decisions of the arbitrator (committee, whatever) is respected, done in good faith, neutral, and most importantly accepted and final. I would add that we have also seen a recent flare-up in a very similar and possibly closely related "British Isles" edit-warring, disagreements and discussions. While a decision here does not effect a decision on "British Isles" as they can be decided seperately, I believe the community only has bandwidth to manage one dispute of this nature. I would suggest that ArbCom rules that all "British Isles" related article changes and renaming is banned until after the current process is decided, but with an undertaking that the issues outlined within the WP:BISLES taskforce will be worked on immediately after this one (I'm sure the lessons learned here will be valuable and speed up the WP:BISLES process). --HighKing (talk) 15:54, 4 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by MooretwinIt becomes clearer with every dispute, every edit war, that the only solution to this is a comprehensive one, covering not merely the names of the articles, but a protocol for names within the texts of other articles, and for descriptive-names of articles (e.g. Politics of the Republic of Ireland, or Culture of Ireland). There's been a compromise proposal on the table since December of last year, which was sadly ignored by Arbcom who put in place the recently-closed futile "statementing" process instead. It needs a bit more work to pin down detail (which is essential in order to avoid edit wars on the hundreds of articles across Wikipedia which refer to Ireland or the Republic), but the essence is there. Mooretwin (talk) 19:54, 4 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by Sarah777Utterly and totally oppose this. I oppose any attempt to stifle discussion of what is, put simply, the imposition of British POV in opposition to WP:NPOV . "Forum shopping"? There are so many articles where the network of British-Wiki political imposition impinges on Ireland-related articles that this proposal is an abusers charter. We will have biased (or uninformed) Admins blocking and banning right, left and centre. The SarekOfVulcan block has surely illustrated the dangers? The refusal of the Wiki Admin Community to recognise (or maybe to acknowledge) that what we have here is the imposition of Nationalist POV by simple numerical supremacy is the elephant in the room. What is proposed is yet another stratagem to silence Irish editors who refuse to accept the imposition of British pov under the guise of "consensus". Look no further than the calls (above) for votes to enforce majotitarianism rather than WP:NPOV. Which is a very different concept. As Mooretwin (who is generally on the opposite political pole to me on British/Irish issues) points out, there are compromises acceptable to reasonable editors on both sides, but Wiki appears unable to contemplate any change in the status quo. Sarah777 (talk) 21:56, 4 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by SnowdedOppose it is however essential that someone takes a grip on the process, finding a solution to this has been stalled by a mediation process that never started and mediators who resigned. --Snowded TALK 22:32, 4 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by ClemMcGannI concur with Sarah's statement, above. There are editors who wish to impose, what is, an imperialist agenda. Yet they seem oblivious to their errors. Their numbers give them confidence. This is a matter of regret. To compound the injury, it now appears that freely discussing these mistakes is some form of a thought-crime which can have an editor silenced. I tend not to get involved in these arguments. They are so wasteful. But, I feel that I must protest the actions of Sarek. With regret ClemMcGann (talk) 22:47, 4 June 2009 (UTC)
I see that the Deacon has since opened a poll. Why? We know that there are more British editors. It would seem that mob rule will prevail. ClemMcGann (talk) 23:30, 4 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by BastunConcur with Deacon of Pndapetzim above. The process outlined in the original Arbcom Remedy 1 and Remedy 2 has, unfortunately, failed to get anywhere. Some progress was made, but we've been stymied by a lack of leadership from the moderators and, frankly, an unwillingness to give an inch from both sides, to the extent that factual statements (with a link to the relevant legislation), such as "The description of the state is defined in law as "the Republic of Ireland", by Section 2 of the Republic of Ireland Act 1948, which says in full: "It is hereby declared that the description of the State shall be the Republic of Ireland."" are opposed by some users. I believe it is now up to Arbcom to take control and either impose a solution, or at least for a subcommittee of Arbcom members to take over the reigns at WP:IECOLL. I would also like to point out that Sarah777 does not speak for or represent all (or many) Irish editors or Irish people generally, and some of her comments above seem to fly in the face of an already-imposed Arbcom remedy. BastunBaStun not BaTsun 23:43, 4 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by (currently uninvolved editor) ScolaireFirst, an observation: looking at this discussion for the first time in six months I am astonished to discover that it has not moved on as much as an inch in that time! The identical arguments are still being recycled on a daily, sometimes an hourly, basis. How many cycles is that since August last year? Each side continues to believe that it has the overwhelming community support as against a handful of wreckers on the other side. What I see, as a (now) outsider, is overwhelming community boredom with the whole issue, and a handful of emotional editors intent on continuing their trench warfare, almost for its own sake. I wouldn't mind so much if it was even a good old-fashioned British/Irish, North/South or Nationalist/Unionist ding-dong, but it's not - it's a totally home-made war between two rainbow coalitions that doesn't reflect any equivalent debate in the real world! Second, a question: as I understand it, the proposal here is for discussion of the issues to be confined to IECOLL, but Deacon of Pndapetzim has responded by opening a new community poll page; what has the one to do with the other? Does the creation of yet another new page not encourage decentralisation rather than the reverse? Based on the above, and on the assumption that the question on the table is still about confining the cyclical homemade civil war to the designated area, I support the request. Scolaire (talk) 06:27, 5 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by (original Arbitration requester) EvertypeSupport if and only if ArbCom takes this seriously and actually does something. And that includes having a poll that actually gives all of the options, and allowing people to rank their preferences. This is not unlike the Proportional Representation we enjoy. There may be more than one option that I can support, and of several options I may prefer one configuration over another. I have seen arbitrator Masem propose a poll with only two options. I oppose this. Just above we see Deacon offering a new page; I requested that he add another option there but my proposal was dismissed because it "makes no sense" by which Deacon means he didn't agree with it. And we see just above Mooretwin pointing to his "compromise proposal"; note that I opposed that except as part of a more comprehensive solution. Such a solution cannot be devised by a simple majority binary poll. We need to recognize that a complex topic needs a complex poll. Like Scoláire above I am disillusioned by this process. So while appreciative of Sarah777's and Snowded's comments above, I think support is the appropriate suggestion. BY THE WAY I would like the Arbitrators to specifically address my request for a complex poll which offers a range of solutions and permits ranked preferences. -- Evertype·✆ 08:30, 6 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by (naming project moderator) MasemI would have to agree that attempts to purposely move the discussion from the naming project talk pages or its subpages to any other pages, is trying to undermine the process. It's one thing for a new editor to come in asking about the name (at which point a causal pointed to the naming project can be provided), but to try to change the naming issues at the article level and bypass the project does seem to be against the spirit of which the original ArbCom goals of the project were set up for. There are a lot of potentially disruptive personalities involved here, and that attempts to subvert the process by any means should not be considered kindly by ArbCom, the moderators, or the project. --MASEM (t) 15:45, 8 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by Domer48Oppose: The suggestion by MickMacNee who opened this discussion was to amend the case to explicitly confine discussion of the “issues pertinent to the case,” to the nominated discussion venue, namely WP:IECOLL. However the motion as it is presented is to confine this to “Discussions relating to the “naming of Ireland” articles must occur at Wikipedia:WikiProject Ireland Collaboration.” This creates ambiguity, because Editors and Admin’s could interpret this motion to mean all subjects including article “content” being excluded from the Article talk page. This is evidenced already by one Admin removing all talk page discussions [1], [2], and suggesting they were already acting under an ArbCom directive, [3],[4], [5], [6], [7], a view endorsed by another Admin despite the fact that the discussions related to Article content and not the naming issue. Therefore, should this motion be passed all discussions including content issue as mentioned above would be prohibited. I don't think this is ArbCom's intension or wish. --Domer48'fenian' 18:35, 8 June 2009 (UTC)
Clerk notesIt doesn't appear as though the named parties have been notified; doing that now. Hersfold (t/a/c) 14:42, 4 June 2009 (UTC)
Arbitrator views and discussion
MotionsFor this request, there are 14 active arbitrators, minus 1 who is recused, so 7 is a majority. Forum for discussionDiscussions relating to the naming of Ireland articles must occur at Wikipedia:WikiProject Ireland Collaboration.
ModerationModerators of Wikipedia:WikiProject Ireland Collaboration may ban any contributor from the pages within the scope of the WikiProject for up to a month when a contributor is disrupting the collaboration process.
Request for clarification: Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Ireland article namesList of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:
Statement by MasemAs one of the current moderators on the Wikipedia:WikiProject Ireland Collaboration to resolve the above, I have noticed behavior that I consider disruptive, and while per the second motion made here (sorry, I cannot find where these have been archived otherwise - the case wasn't amended to include them) gives me the ability to take action, I'd rather verify this first. User Redking7 has been trying to start a discussion on Republic of Ireland (currently where information about the 26-county state is located), first started here, which expanded out to this much before text was removed. Ok, there's a bunch of crap happening here, but sticking to the point that ArbCom is involved, Redking's attempt to rename the ROI article at the time discussion was going on clearly (to me) is against the case's first motion from here (in that Discussions relating to the naming of Ireland articles must occur at Wikipedia:WikiProject Ireland Collaboration. Now, I'm willing to give a benefit of a doubt to some degree: the above motion closed on June 12th, Redking7's suggestion opened on June 6th and it looks like it may have been spurred by that. However, Redking7 continues to argue over the details of this (see comments from this diff as well as discussion here. I personally see this as rules-lawyering (the intent of what ArbCom wants seems perfectly clear), but rather than act first, ask questions later, I will assume good faith for now but seek ArbCom's clarification if discussion about the renaming of individual articles that are part of the Ireland naming issue can be discussed on those individual talk pages or should they be brought to the Ireland Collaboration project. --MASEM (t) 17:32, 20 June 2009 (UTC) Statement by Redking7BACKGROUND/FACTS: I have been told by other editors that “ArbCom” has made rules saying: "Discussions relating to the naming of Ireland articles must occur at Wikipedia:WikiProject Ireland Collaboration. Moderators of Wikipedia:WikiProject Ireland Collaboration may ban any contributor from the pages within the scope of the WikiProject for up to a month when a contributor is disrupting the collaboration process." On the basis of the above, a discussion I started on Talk: Republic of Ireland concerning the title name was archived. I disputed the interpretation put on the above stating that the discussion I had started:
and on that basis discussion should be allowed to continue. Notwithstanding the explanations I gave, Masem insists I have broked ArbCom rules and said he/she was giving me his/her “only warning”.
Clerk notesArbitrator views and discussion
Request for clarification: Ireland article names
Initiated by Rannpháirtí anaithnid at 19:07, 17 February 2010 (UTC) List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:
Notice has been posted to Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Ireland Collaboration. Membership as follows:
Statement by Rannpháirtí anaithnidThe above case proposed four remedies to the dispute over how to refer to the island of Ireland and the state of Ireland on Wikipedia. The first of these were:
That was discussion was opened at a designated centralised location. It was undertaken in good faith but failed to reach a decision. A back-up procedure was as follows (2nd remedy):
That back-up procedure was initiated. Over the subsequent months, consensus was unattainable among the participants of the process on the matter of the titles of the Ireland and Republic of Ireland articles. In light of that, a consensus decision was reached to hold a community wide vote on that matter (inspired by the Gdańsk/Danzig vote). That vote took place. The outcome was to have the articles on the state at Republic of Ireland and the articles on the island at Ireland (with a disambiguation page at Ireland (disambiguation)). The result was confirmed by the moderating administrator. Subsequent to that vote, the outstanding matters related to how to refer to Ireland/Republic of Ireland in other places (e.g. in articles). Agreement was reach on those matters by consensus. The result of that consensus has been added to the Ireland manual of style. The titles/locations of those articles has been stable since the vote took place (September). The style guidelines have also been stable since their addition (December) and have been upheld on article discussion pages independent of it. The final remedy related to the binding nature of the process:
Since the result of the vote became there was a substantial drop off in participation in the process and several editors formally withdrew from the process. Owing to this, some say that because of the process became derailed and thus is non-binding/non-completeable. Can we please have confirmation on the following:
-- RA (talk) 19:07, 17 February 2010 (UTC) Statement by RockpocketI'd simply like to affirm Rannpháirtí anaithnid's request, above. We are in a period of relative calm, which probably reflects a de facto appreciation that the community consensus has been established even if many are unwilling to acknowledge it. Nevertheless, it would be helpful for ArbCom to officially sign off on this process, if only to preempt the inevitable arguments - at some point in the future - about when this debate is permitted to be rehashed. Rockpocket 02:54, 18 February 2010 (UTC) Request for further clarification by SarekOfVulcanAssuming that there is a moratorium on "page move discussions", as stated below by Coren, does that further imply that there's a two-year moratorium on arguing that the poll was invalid/rigged/not binding/etc., and are persistent attempts to claim the above blockable under this decision? --SarekOfVulcan (talk) 13:53, 19 February 2010 (UTC) Statement by HighKingApologies that this is a bit late posting here. I didn't realize that it was allowed. Hopefully the committee members that have already posted below will take the time to read this. Agree that we have a period of relative calm, but it is procedurally incorrect to state that the process can be signed off, and that all procedures have been followed. The key timeline points are:
Today, 6 months after the process fell apart, we have a small number of editors trying to rewrite the history and context of this issue, and attempting to turn the original Arbcom process into validation of the time-worn majority imposed single-issue of the name of the article Republic of Ireland. This is wrong, and should be actively discouraged by Arbcom members as failing to develop comprehensive procedures to deal with the larger issue. A factual summary:
Finally, I understand and accept that this issue is old and that most people are fed up with it. But that is no excuse for threatening sanctions against editors for being "argumentative" for pointing out that the Arbcom request has not been fulfilled. The reason the process failed was because over a very short period of time, with input from only a small handful of editors, there was a movement away from a multi-article comprehensive package solution to a single-issue majority vote with no connection to the "bigger picture". So we've learned something. I don't believe there's anything to be gained by rewriting history and making out that this single-issue majority vote was what Arbcom charged the community with doing. I also believe that more can be learned and gained by understanding where the process went off the rails. Sheer mental exhaustion and perhaps more than a modicum of reflection have kept things quiet since September, and I question why some editors have now tried to impose the result of the poll as the Arbcom sanctioned result, complete with lock-in, when it is pretty clear that we're nowhere near reaching an agreement covering multiple articles as instructed by Arbcom. I believe that there's everything to be gained if Arbcom instruct the community to revisit this process sometime in the near future and to continue to work on creating a collaborative solution. --HighKing (talk) 01:26, 25 February 2010 (UTC)
I'd like to ask the Arbcom members to discuss in a little more detail the motion The Arbitration Committee notes that the conditions put forward by remedies during the Ireland article names arbitration case were fulfilled to the Committee's satisfaction with specific emphasis on explaining which specific conditions were fulfilled to the Committee's satisfaction. Because I have followed the process closely, and I'm at a total loss how this decision has been reached. I've outlined above what the remedies were, and what has been achieved, and the gap between. Can someone please help me understand why the Committee believes that where we've ended up is satisfactory? All I can see is the Committee taking this opportunity to sweep the issue under the carpet with vague threats of silencing or sanctioning anyone who doesn't go along with it. --HighKing (talk) 16:18, 2 March 2010 (UTC)
Anyone care to respond please? Can someone from the Arbcom Committee discuss this please? The process and remedies have not been fulfilled, yet the Committee appear to have decided that an aborted partially fulfilled process where the result was skewed by a British majority POV on a single issue of naming a single article. There is no record of the Committee examining and agreeing that the process was fulfilled, and there is no record of the Committee matching the result against the remedies. Can the Committee examine each remedy, and comment on the fulfillment of each please? --HighKing (talk) 12:37, 3 March 2010 (UTC) Statement by EvertypeI am the one who started the arbitration process. It has failed. I quit the collaboration project because of the bad faith on the part of many participants, and in particular because of the lack of effective leadership in arbitration from Masem. And I no longer edit Ireland-related articles. In fact, I edit the Wikipedia a lot less than I used to. Well, done, Arbitration Committee, for doing nothing positive, or pro-active, or helpful. I hope you appoint better arbitrators in 2011. -- Evertype·✆ 15:37, 28 February 2010 (UTC) Statement by GoodDayI applaud Arbcom's 2-year freeze on the naming issue. The dispute was becoming a headache & needed a time-out. GoodDay (talk) 18:01, 2 March 2010 (UTC)
Clerk notesArbitrator views and discussion
Motions1) The Arbitration Committee notes that the conditions put forward by remedies during the Ireland article names arbitration case were fulfilled to the Committee's satisfaction and that, as a consequence, remedy 4 ("[...] no further page moves discussions related to these articles shall be initiated for a period of 2 years.") is in force until September 18, 2011. (There being 16 arbitrators, four of whom are inactive and two others are recused, the majority is 6) ~ Amory (u • t • c) 16:29, 24 February 2010 (UTC) Enacted ~ Amory (u • t • c) 16:00, 5 March 2010 (UTC)
2) While the related matter of how to refer to Ireland/Republic of Ireland in other places (such as articles) is not directly covered by the aforementioned remedies, the Committee takes notes of the existence of a de facto consensus on the matter owing to the stability of the Ireland manual of style and enjoins the community to avoid needlessly rehashing the disputes. (There being 16 arbitrators, four of whom are inactive and one of whom is recused, the majority is 6) ~ Amory (u • t • c) 16:29, 24 February 2010 (UTC) Enacted ~ Amory (u • t • c) 16:00, 5 March 2010 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Request for clarification: Ireland article namesInitiated by RA (talk) at 08:42, 29 June 2010 (UTC) List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:
Statement by Rannpháirtí anaithnidThis request for clarification relates to Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Ireland article names. The case itself related to the titles of the Ireland and Republic of Ireland articles. However it touched on the use of the words Ireland and Republic of Ireland throughout the encyclopaedia. In concluding the case, ArbCom passed two motions. The first of these related to the titles of the Ireland articles. The second related to the use of the words Ireland and Republic of Ireland throughout the encyclopaedia. Notice of the motions can be see here. A thread has been opened at Talk:British Isles relating to the use of Ireland and Republic of Ireland in the lead to that article. During the course of the tread it was said that this matter was covered by an ArbCom motion and editors were told to follow that motion. The relevance of the ArbCom motion is disputed. Can we clarify:
Finally, though not brought up by any editor during the course of the tread: with respect to WP:CCC, does ArbCom have comment with regards to how WP:CCC would relate to the consensus at the Ireland-related MOS and use of Ireland/Republic of Ireland across the encyclopaedia? --RA (talk) 08:42, 29 June 2010 (UTC) Statement by Snowden
CommentWith respect to the last point, I made this request for clarification after Snoweded questioned the applicability of the relevant motion (not for the first time): "This has nothing to do with the Arbcom resolution which is far narrower in its meaning that your attempted use. As long as people make that error I will correct it. I can see no consensus that I am failing to respect." (diff) Also I am not interested in artificially maintaining "consensus" through any kind of gaming, hence my question about how WP:CCC relates to this motion. --RA (talk) 11:17, 29 June 2010 (UTC) Statement by HighKingAccording to what @RA is stating above, what is to stop any editor who wants to use "Republic of Ireland" to simply cry "I'm confused", and invoke the WP:IMOS? Or as in this case, to refuse to craft lede paragraphs in such a way as to very simply avoid confusion? And quiet frankly, I don't see where the IMOS is *not* being followed. The IMOS currently states:
The first clause uses an example that most editors (me included) wouldn't object to. But it certainly doesn't cover the current case. The second clause clearly sets out that where the state forms a major component of the topic (which in the current case, it does), we should stick with using the formal title. This example is far closer to the usage within the lede of British Isles. We've discussed this and a consensus appears to have emerged on the article Talk page, and RA bringing this here looks a little sour grapish. --HighKing (talk) 11:41, 29 June 2010 (UTC)
Statement by BritishWatcherThe dispute over on British Isles at the moment about if Republic of Ireland can be used highlights that the resolution to the Ireland naming dispute has yet to be resolved fully. In the same paragraph the island of Ireland is mentioned, it is there for helpful to the readers for Republic of Ireland to be used in that introduction when talking about the state. Republic of Ireland can be used when there is a need to avoid ambiguity, this is one of those clear cases where it is justified and a clarification about this subject would be helpful to prevent such a dispute causing problems in the future. We all accept the country is called Ireland, the trouble is just saying Ireland clearly causes confusion sometimes because there also happens to be an island called Ireland. BritishWatcher (talk) 22:50, 29 June 2010 (UTC) Statement by other userClerk notesArbitrator views and discussion
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Request for clarification: WP:Requests for arbitration/Ireland article namesInitiated by Fmph (talk) at 19:53, 19 August 2011 (UTC) List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:
Statement by FmphCan I direct ArbCom's attention to the first motion in this case. It states that "... no page moves shall be initiated for a period of 2 years" and that ruling is in force until September 18, 2011. Can ArbCom please clarify what they expect to happen on the 18th September? There have been continued 'suggestions' over the last 23 months that the articles should be moved. So the issue has not gone away. I have made a suggestion (in response to a question as to whether the prohibition should be extended) as to what should happen. If ArbCom think its not a bad idea, perhaps they would like to endorse it, or something like it? I will notify the project that I have opened this clarification.
Suggestion by snowdedThis was a deeply divisive and long running dispute and the closure last time was managed by some of the protagonists with consequent accusations of manipulation etc. I think there is a very strong case this time round for a strong mediation team of neutrals to structure the discussion. Possibly with a nominee of each side I'm sure we have some sleeper accounts in place ready for the debate and we had enough socks etc last time to be the subject of a whole dissertation. Best to manage it from the start than to be pulled in later --Snowded TALK 09:56, 25 August 2011 (UTC) Statement by other userClerk notes
Arbitrator views and discussion
Request for clarification: Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Ireland article namesInitiated by DrKiernan (talk) at 12:37, 21 September 2011 (UTC) List of any users involved or directly affected, and confirmation that all are aware of the request:
Statement by DrKiernanWhile remedy 4 is clearly expired, I am not clear whether the motion Wikipedia talk:Requests for arbitration/Ireland article names#Request to amend prior case: Ireland article names that restricts move discussions to Wikipedia:WikiProject Ireland Collaboration is still in effect. The motion does not appear to be time-bound. Would the Committee please clarify whether the motion is still in force? Thanks. DrKiernan (talk) 12:37, 21 September 2011 (UTC) Statement by SirFozzieI'm obviously recused here (as an Arbitrator) due to my past involvement as an administrator, but wanted to make this statement. I agree with my colleagues that the motions ARE indefinite, but I have concerns that we are walling off the problem, rather than fixing the base issue behind it. If it was listed at Requested Page moves as well, at least we would get SOME new blood looking at the request, other then the "same old faces in the same old ways". However, I don't think willy-nilly pagemoves are a good idea, so agree to keep it restricted in this fashion, but I urge uninvolved Arb-watchers (is there a version of talk page watchers for ArbCases/Clarifications etcetera? :D) to keep an eye on the discussions, and contribute there if you can. SirFozzie (talk) 18:48, 21 September 2011 (UTC) Statement by other userClerk notes
Arbitrator views and discussion
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