At Weave we want to do conflict well. We want tensions between members to be generative, healthy and productive. We want a culture of robust debate, honesty, and care - all in service of our mission. In this document you will find the principles, practice and process to take to safely and appropriately resolve conflict.

Note : If you've contemplated the experience and have decided it feels like it may be harassment or abuse, please consult our Harassment and Abuse Policy.

Principles

Practice

how we encourage effective communication within our collective

Conflict Resolution Process

We endeavor to resolve conflicts at the lowest possible escalation step, but agree to escalate conflicts if they are not resolved. We ask all Weave participants to recognize these network safety guidelines for resolving serious conflicts. If you are in conflict with someone else consider taking these four steps :

  1. Personal reflection & individual support : Think through what happened. Take time and space to process and clarify your thinking if you feel confused, overwhelmed, or are experiencing strong emotions. Talk to a trusted friend, colleague, or your steward to work through your own perspective and experience. Ask yourself what part you played in it, what you could have done different, and what your needs are to improve the situation. If you feel you need to go beyond individual work to resolve the problem, escalate to the next step.
  2. Direct communication : As long as you feel safe and the power balance and tone is conducive to constructive discussion, approach the person in question and talk it out. Be mindful of picking a good time and place (privacy, lack of time pressure, mutually agreed location). If you don’t feel like you can work it out one-on-one for any reason, escalate to the next step.
  3. Supported communication : Bring in your steward to host a conversation with the people involved. The other party might want to bring their steward, too. If the stewards feel insufficiently resourced, or you’ve tried and it didn’t resolve the conflict, escalate to the next step.