From Unlock15
Jump to: navigation, search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{semorg-toolbox
{{semorg-toolbox
|name=decision making with low hierachies
|name=Decision making with low hierachies
|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.

Revision as of 12:21, 1 June 2026

TOOL
Decision making with low hierachies
Short 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.

Unlock-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.

Lock-in Layers

institutional

Lock-in Cluster

Lack of Motivation/Intention & Habits

Tool maturity Level

TML5

Level of effort for application

medium

Skill level needed for application

medium

Suitable spatial context

flexible

Spatial limitation

no

Target group

NGOs / local interest groups

Tool type

Vision

Languages

english, german