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{{semorg-toolbox | {{semorg-toolbox | ||
|name= | |name=Efficient decision making in low hierachy settings | ||
|description=Sociocracy is a governance and decision-making method designed to enable self-organization in groups and organizations without traditional top-down authority. Rather than relying on majority votes or hierarchical decisions, sociocracy is based on the consent principle: a decision is valid as soon as no member of the circle has a serious, well-founded objection — meaning arguments count, not the number of votes. | |description=Sociocracy is a governance and decision-making method designed to enable self-organization in groups and organizations without traditional top-down authority. Rather than relying on majority votes or hierarchical decisions, sociocracy is based on the consent principle: a decision is valid as soon as no member of the circle has a serious, well-founded objection — meaning arguments count, not the number of votes. | ||
|hypothesis=For grassroots civil society initiatives, sociocracy offers a practical framework for making collective decisions that everyone can genuinely support, distributing responsibility across the group, and building a culture of equal participation — without falling into the inefficiencies of either pure consensus or informal power dynamics. | |hypothesis=For grassroots civil society initiatives, sociocracy offers a practical framework for making collective decisions that everyone can genuinely support, distributing responsibility across the group, and building a culture of equal participation — without falling into the inefficiencies of either pure consensus or informal power dynamics. | ||
| Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
|lock-in-cluster=Lack of Motivation/Intention & Habits | |lock-in-cluster=Lack of Motivation/Intention & Habits | ||
|tool-maturity-level=TML5 | |tool-maturity-level=TML5 | ||
|link-information=https://www. | |link-information=https://soziokratiezentrum.org/ueber-soziokratie/grundlagen-der-soziokratie-4-basisprinzipien/, https://www.talkspirit.com/blog/sociocracy | ||
|link-material=https://www. | |link-material=https://soziokratiezentrum.org/ueber-soziokratie/grundlagen-der-soziokratie-4-basisprinzipien/, https://www.talkspirit.com/blog/sociocracy | ||
|effort-level= | |effort-level=medium | ||
|skill-level=medium | |skill-level=medium | ||
|spatial-context=flexible | |spatial-context=flexible | ||
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|target-group=NGOs / local interest groups | |target-group=NGOs / local interest groups | ||
|tool-type=Vision | |tool-type=Vision | ||
|language=english | |language=english, german | ||
|empowerment-strategy=shared knowledge generation | |empowerment-strategy=shared knowledge generation | ||
}} | }} | ||
Latest revision as of 14:16, 1 June 2026
Sociocracy is a governance and decision-making method designed to enable self-organization in groups and organizations without traditional top-down authority. Rather than relying on majority votes or hierarchical decisions, sociocracy is based on the consent principle: a decision is valid as soon as no member of the circle has a serious, well-founded objection — meaning arguments count, not the number of votes.
For grassroots civil society initiatives, sociocracy offers a practical framework for making collective decisions that everyone can genuinely support, distributing responsibility across the group, and building a culture of equal participation — without falling into the inefficiencies of either pure consensus or informal power dynamics.
institutional
Lack of Motivation/Intention & Habits
TML5
medium
medium
flexible
no
NGOs / local interest groups
Vision
english, german