Diversity and Inclusion Strategy/Community Participation Guidelines
Overview
In May 2017, Mozilla released the revised Community Participation Guidelines - Version 2.3 (hereto referred to as CPG). Please see this page for information on the background and process, the Brownbag schedule, contact info, and a continually updated set of Frequently Asked Questions.
You can find the CPG hosted on Mozilla.org: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/governance/policies/participation/
Background
This revision comes from years of community feedback and is in direct response to collected information from the Diversity and Inclusion Team's research findings of 2015-2016 that the previous version of the CPG, while important and well intended, is not sufficiently well understood or clear and enforceable to build foundational safety needed to create a truly inclusive and diverse Mozilla.
Goals
There were three specific goals in revising the CPG: 1. Scope: The CPG is for all Mozillians, not just staff or volunteer, but everyone. 2. Clarity: Both behavioral expectations and potential consequences are explicit, as is the process for raising issues and concerns. 3. Use Cases: The document provides the right level of detail around both digital and in person interactions, as well as specific guidance for those building events or online forums around extra steps to ensure adherence to the CPG in those spaces.
Revision Process
- The revised CPG was drafted from a combination of existing guidelines and the Participation Team Safety Guidelines with the strong guidance of the resources below.
- The draft was written and reviewed by a cross-functional team of Mozillians from: Diversity and Inclusion, members of the D&I Strategy Working Group, Mozilla Community Members, Mozilla Leadership Networks, Participation, Internal Communications, Firefox, Bugzilla community management, SUMO, Legal, and multiple external experts.
- The draft was reviewed and approved by Mozilla leadership and then shared with community members in multiple forums including public blog posts, Discourse, Activate campaigns, and social media. Extensive feedback was collected and incorporated into the final draft.
- The final draft was localized from English into 5 languages (Spanish, German, French, Traditional Mandarin, Portuguese) and published to mozilla.org
- The CPG is a living document and feedback is always welcome and encouraged
Resources & Best Practices Reviewed
- Mozilla’s Participation Team Event Safety Guidelines
Mozilla’s current Community Participation Guidelines Ubuntu’s Code of Conduct Mozilla’s View Source Conference Code of Conduct Rust Language Code of Conduct Stumptown Syndicate’s Citizen Code of Conduct Django Code of Conduct Geek Feminism Anti-Harassment Policy LGBTQ in Technology Code of Conduct WisCon code of conduct and anti-abuse policy. Open Science Lab, Geek Feminism Wikia, and Ada Initiative guidelines on building a strong code of conduct, Geek Feminism Wikia’s code of conduct ratings.
Brownbags & Roadshows
The Diversity and Inclusion Team will host four brownbags on Air Mozilla/Vidyo the week of June 19, prior to the 2017 San Francisco June All Hands. The brownbags will be scheduled to accommodate all major regions: Asia-Pacific; Europe, Middle East, Africa; North America/Lain America - Pacific; North America/Latin America - Eastern.
In H2 2017, the Diversity and Inclusion Team will also hold CPG workshop sessions in various regions. Please check back in H2 2017 for more information on the CPG Roadshows.
Schedule
The brownbags are currently being scheduled for the week of June 19, 2017. More information and calendar invites will be shared shortly.
Contact
If you have questions or feedback on the CPG revision, please contact inclusion@mozilla.com, which reaches our Diversity & Inclusion Head, Larissa Shapiro, and our Director of Organizational Development, Tyler Haugen.
Reporting
If you believe you’re experiencing unacceptable behavior, please contact inclusion@mozilla.com and the designated person for your event, activity or Mozilla space. After receiving a concise description of your situation, they will review and determine next steps. In addition to conducting any investigation, they can provide a range of resources, from a private consultation to other community resources. They will involve other colleagues, including legal counsel, only as needed to appropriately address each situation.
Please also report to us if you observe a potentially dangerous situation, someone in distress, or violations of the guidelines, even if the situation is not happening to you.
If you feel you have been unfairly accused of violating the guidelines, please follow the same reporting process.