The Community Working Group: What We Do, and How We Do It
In previous posts, we’ve talked about who the Community Working Group (CWG) is and why we’re here, as well some of the work we’ve done around establishing a process for conflict resolution in the Drupal community.
In this post, I’d like to go into more detail about what happens when folks file incident reports with the Community Working Group, and open up the conversation on how we can more effectively address issues that have a larger impact on the Drupal community as a whole.
Read moreConflict Resolution Policy and Process
UPDATE: The policy has now been adopted by the community working group. It lives here: https://drupal.org/conflict-resolution (now with pretty URL!)
For some time we've had a bit of unfinished business around the Drupal Code of Conduct around how we manage and respond to conflict.
The Community Working Group has drafted a policy and is now looking for community feedback over the next 2 weeks. Please check out the draft in the drupal-cwg issue queue.
https://drupal.org/node/2227717
Read moreHave you heard about Drupal’s Community Working Group?
In early 2013 our fearless and benevolent leader, Dries Buytaert, formalised a governance structure and started a number of working groups for the Drupal project as a whole, and for our home on the Web, Drupal.org.

Hur ska vi uppföra oss i vår community?
Moshe Weitzman skapade nyligen en ny grupp här på g.d.o. Gruppens syfte är att ta fram en "Code of conduct" - ett dokument om hur man bör uppföra sig i vår community. En sorts "coding standard" fast för hur vår community ska fungera och fortleva. Grunden är tagen direkt ifrån Ubuntu Code of Conduct som har fungerat med framgång.
Read moreAdopt a Drupal Code of Conduct (#DCOC)
As our community grows, it is imperative that we preserve the what got us here. Namely, we keep Drupal a fun, welcoming, challenging, and fair place to play. IMO, we need to proactively state our shared ideals with respect to conduct. Think of this as coding standards for people :)
Our friends at Ubuntu have blazed a brilliant trail in this area. They use our CMS, and I propose that we use their Code of Conduct.
Read more

