--On Monday, April 29, 2013 09:46 -0700 Dave Crocker <dhc@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 4/29/2013 9:38 AM, John C Klensin wrote: >> First, our having these >> discussions have, I believe, already increased sensitivities >> to the issues and maybe even how the community thinks about >> it. > > > Actually, it probably hasn't. > > It has raised awareness that there are people who are > sensitive to the topic. It probably has raised some people's > awareness that there are serious issues here and that the IETF > ought to pay attention to them (better). > > I seriously doubt it has afforded many folk a sense of how to > behave differently, and how to evaluate community and > management choices in terms of diversity concerns. I am trying (temporarily) to be more optimistic than that, but I fear that you may be correct. If so, we may be in big trouble and/or wasting our time by even having this discussion. If raising awareness and sensitivity isn't enough to get people to think about and make decisions differently and the only criteria the community will accept for either the existence of a problem or evidence that progress is being made is hard, frequency-based, statistical (or statistical analyses of experimental) data then, -- we can quibble endlessly about what should be measured and what the measurements mean and probably will, and -- we will never agree on quantitative criteria for progress or adequate diversity because such criteria will have the odor of preferential treatment and quotas (whether they are or not). And that applies not just to selections by the Nomcom but to all of the selections that are affected by the "select people whom you know and know can do the job" behavior that has been discussed at length in another thread. > Let's not confuse activity with progress. Indeed. Let's also try to avoid defining progress in a way that makes even useful activity impossible. But, again, I fear you are correct about all of this. john