Arbitration Committee of the English Wikipedia
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Wikimedia Foundation The Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., or Wikimedia for short and abbreviated as WMF, is an American 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization headquartered in San Francisco, California and registered as a charitable foundation under local laws. Best know ...
projects, an Arbitration Committee (ArbCom) is a binding dispute resolution panel of editors. Each of Wikimedia's projects are editorially autonomous and independent, and some of them have established their own ArbComs who work according rules developed by the project's editors and are usually annually elected by their communities. ArbComs generally address misconduct by administrators and editors with access to advanced tools, and a range of " real-world" issues related to harmful conduct that can arise in the context of a Wikimedia projects. Rulings, policies and procedures differ between projects depending on local and cultural contexts. According to the Wikimedia Terms of Use, users are not obliged to have a dispute solved by an ArbCom. The first Wikimedia project to use an arbitration committee was the Swedish Wikipedia, soon followed by the widely covered
English Wikipedia The English Wikipedia is, along with the Simple English Wikipedia, one of two English-language editions of Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia. It was founded on January 15, 2001, as Wikipedia's first edition, and, as of , has the most arti ...
Committee. Over time, other Wikimedia projects have established Arbitration Committees as well. The English Wikipedia ArbCom was created by Jimmy Wales on December 4, 2003, as an extension of the decision-making power he formerly held as CEO of site-owner
Bomis Bomis ( to rhyme with "promise") was a dot-com company best known for supporting the creations of free-content online-encyclopedia projects Nupedia and Wikipedia. It was co-founded in 1996 by Jimmy Wales, Tim Shell, and Michael Davis. ...
. Wales appointed members of the committee either in person or by email following advisory elections; Wales generally appointed editors who received the most votes to the ArbCom. The English Wikipedia's ArbCom acts as a
court of last resort A supreme court is the highest court within the hierarchy of courts in most legal jurisdictions. Other descriptions for such courts include court of last resort, apex court, and high (or final) court of appeal. Broadly speaking, the decisions of ...
for disputes among editors and has been described in the media as "quasi-judicial" and a Wikipedian "High or Supreme Court", although the Committee states it is not and does not pretend to be a formal court of law. English Wikipedia's ArbCom has decided several hundred cases in its history. The Foundation's Arbitration Committee process has been examined by academics researching dispute resolution, and has been reported in public media in connection with case decisions and Wikipedia-related controversies.


History

The Swedish Wikipedia "Thing (assembly), thing" of November 2002 became the first instance akin to a prototype Arbitral tribunal, arbitration committee on any Wikipedia language version. In October 2003, as part of an etiquette discussion on Wikipedia, Alex Roshuk, Alex T. Roshuk, then legal adviser to the
Wikimedia Foundation The Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., or Wikimedia for short and abbreviated as WMF, is an American 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization headquartered in San Francisco, California and registered as a charitable foundation under local laws. Best know ...
, drafted a 1,300-word outline of mediation and arbitration. This outline evolved into the twin Mediation Committee and Arbitration Committee, formally announced by Jimmy Wales on December 4, 2003. Over time the concept of an "Arbitration Committee" was adopted by other communities within the Wikimedia Foundation's hosted projects. When founded, the Committee consisted of 12 arbitrators divided into three groups of four members each.


On English Wikipedia


Controversies

A statistical study published in the ''Emory Law Journal'' in 2010 indicated that the committee has generally adhered to the principles of ignoring the content of user disputes and focusing on user conduct. The same study also found that despite every case being assessed on its own merits, a correlation emerged between the types of conduct found to have occurred and the remedies and decisions imposed by the committee. In 2007, an arbitrator using the username Essjay controversy, Essjay resigned from the committee after it was found he had made false claims about his academic qualifications and professional experiences in a ''The New Yorker'' interview. Also in 2007, the committee banned Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Carl Hewitt from editing the online encyclopedia for "disruptive" behavior of manipulating articles to align with his own research. In May 2009, an arbitrator who edited under the username Sam Blacketer resigned from the committee after it became known he had concealed his past editing when obtaining the role. In 2009, the committee was brought to media attention as a result of its decision to ban "all IP addresses owned or operated by the Church of Scientology and its associates, broadly interpreted", as part of the fourth Scientology-related case. Such an action had "little precedent" in the eight-year history of Wikipedia and was reported on several major news services such as ''The New York Times'', ''ABC News'', and ''The Guardian''. Satirical news-show host Stephen Colbert ran a segment on ''The Colbert Report'' parodying the ban. In 2022, the Committee lifted the ban citing the lack of disruption in recent years. In 2015, Criticism of Wikipedia#Allegations of biased treatment, the committee received attention for its ruling pertaining to the Gamergate controversy, in which one editor was indefinitely banned from the site and several others were banned from editing topics relating to Gamergate and gender. In June 2015, the committee removed advanced permissions from Richard Symonds, an activist for the British political party Liberal Democrats (UK), Liberal Democrats. Symonds had improperly blocked a Wikipedia account and associated its edits with former Chairman of the Conservative Party Grant Shapps, and leaked this to ''The Guardian''. Shapps denied ownership of the account, calling the allegations "categorically false and defamatory". Symonds said in an interview he stood by his actions.


In academic studies

A 2017 study found the committee's decision making was mostly unaffected by extra-legal factors such as nationality, activity, experience, conflict avoidance, and time constraints. The same study found the committee's decision making was much more affected by time constraints than that of conventional courts.


On Wikimedia Foundation projects worldwide

The Swedish Wikipedia "Thing (assembly), thing" of 24 November 2002 became the first prototype Arbitral tribunal, arbitration committee on any Wikipedia language version, effectively making Swedish Wikipedia the first decentralized Wikipedia while the other Wikipedias were still under Jimmy Wales' personal supervision. In 2004, an Arbitration Committee was founded on the French Wikipedia, and in 2007, on the German Wikipedia, German,, Polish Wikipedia, Polish, Finnish_Wikipedia, Finnish and Dutch Wikipedia, Dutch Wikipedias. Arbitration Committees are now used on eleven Wikipedia versions and the English Wikinews.


References

{{Wikipedia Wikipedia Arbitration organizations Quasi-judicial bodies Organizations established in 2003