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Simon Bradshaw ([personal profile] major_clanger) wrote2014-08-20 01:41 pm

Idea: how to ensure awareness of Codes of Conduct

Loncon 3 seemed to do quite well with its Code of Conduct; it was available on the website and reprinted in the front of the convention pocket guide. As far as I'm aware, there were only a handful of incidents reported to the convention staff that required it to be applied.

However, I've seen discussion about the convention that suggests that some attendees still did not understand what the CoC was meant to set out in terms of appropriate and inappropriate behaviour. I've been giving some thought to how we might ensure that everyone at a convention is clearly and unambiguously aware of the CoC, and more importantly, can be proven to be aware of it.

At Loncon 3, registration involved being handed your badge. How about if instead we handed over a sealed envelope containing the badge, printed up as below. (The box with my name in is an indication that there would be a sticker identifying whose badge was inside).

 photo CoC_Envelope_zps95591e95.jpg

For this to work, you have to plan this from the outset, and ensure that:

- for online memberships, anyone joining has to click on a 'I agree with the Code of Conduct' tick-box in order to join;

- for direct sales, there is a 'sign to agree our Code of Conduct' box on the membership form.

This makes it absolutely clear both when you join the convention and when you pick up your badge that the Code of Conduct applies to you.

I've put in the refund option because I think this strengthens the convention's position: it allows someone a final chance to say 'no, I don't want to be bound by this'. Of course, as it excludes what we lawyers call consequential expenses (e.g. travel and hotel) I doubt that many people will exercise it, but the fact that it's there helps avoid arguments about the validity of the 'open the envelope and you're agreeing' notice.

(For those interested in the legality: this isn't a shrink-wrap licence situation, as the notice on the envelope is just confirming what members have expressly signed up to when they joined. Rather, it's actually adding an exit clause to the membership contract.)

[identity profile] penguineggs.livejournal.com 2014-08-20 06:55 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't know how many times you've been sexually harassed (and please don't think I'm asking you to share any information you don't feel comfortable with sharing) but actually in a group of 7000-8000 (as there was at the last Worldcon), with a bar open from 10.00am and a lot of people having the sort of "I'm on holiday, so what the Hell?" vibe and some people having the "I'm massively locally famous, so what the Hell?" vibe, I'd say that bad behaviour was inevitable and criminal behaviour highly likely. Think the average small town/large village on a boozy weekend, extended to five days.

[identity profile] vicarage.livejournal.com 2014-08-20 07:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Are you claiming that fannish gatherings are worse than a town centre on a Saturday night? I avoid pubs with bouncers on the door, even though they are supposed to make things safer, and I'd be very wary of an event so worried about bad behaviour that they asked me to sign an affadavit on entry.

[identity profile] penguineggs.livejournal.com 2014-08-20 08:53 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm saying that the odds are that they are little better, and that therefore trying to make sure that attendees are aware of the code of conduct is not an over-reaction, but a realistic approach to making life safer for everyone.

And what is being proposed is not an affidavit; it's a confirmation that one is aware of the contractual terms governing the venue. Something which is true of every cricket ground, theatre, cinema or railway journey to which anyone buys a ticket.

[identity profile] ms-cataclysm.livejournal.com 2014-08-20 09:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I do think that there are worse places than fandom and it's not the only place my friends and I have been on the receiving end of inappropriate behaviour.

But realistically there's still too much nastiness going on in fandom and I don't intend to get in the way of any reasonable suggestion for either clearing it up or limiting the damage from the next Twitterstorm.