A week ago @Rockwell wrote this list of things she thought EAs shoudn't do. I am glad this discussion is happening. I ran a poll (results here) and here is my attempt at a list more people can agree with: .
We can do better, so someone feel free to write version 3.
The list
- These are not norms for what it is to be a good EA, but rather some boundaries around things that would damage trust. When someone doesn't do these things we widely agree it is a bad sign
- EAs should report relevant conflicts of interest
- Eas should not date coworkers they report to or who report to them
- EAs should not use sexist or racist epithets
- EAs should not date their funders/grantees
- EAs should not retain someone as a full-time contractor or grant recipient for the long term, where this is illegal
- EAs should not promote illegal drug use to their colleagues who report to them
Commentary
Beyond racism, crime and conflicts of interest the clear theme is "take employment power relations seriously".
Some people might want other things on this list, but I don't think there is widespread enough agreement to push those things as norms. Some examples:
- Illegal drugs - "EAs should not promote illegal drug use to their colleagues" - 41% agreed, 20% disagreed, 35% said "it's complicated", 4% skipped
- Romance during business hours - "EA, should in general, be as romanceless a place as possible during business hours" - 40% Agreed, 21% disagreed, 36% said "it's complicated", 2% skipped
- Housing - "EAs should not offer employer-provided housing for more than a predefined and very short period of time" - 27% Agreed 37% Disagreed 31% said "it's complicated", 6% skipped.
I know not everyone loves my use of polls or my vibes as a person. But consensus is a really useful tool for moving forward. Sure we can push aside those who disagree, put if we find things that are 70% + agreed, then that tends to move forward much more quickly and painlessly. And it builds trust that we don't steamroll opposition.
So I suggest that rather a big list of things that some parts of the community think are obvious and others think are awful, we try and get a short list of things that most people think are pretty good/fine/obvious.
Once we have a "checkpoint" that is widely agreed, we can tackle some thornier questions.
I think it is extremely ambiguous about what "talk about polyamory" is, for example I imagine many people (tbh I'd guess more than 17% of EAs) would find it unpleasant if there's regular and unavoidable discussions of whether polyamory* is net bad for society, EA, etc, in their workplace. I'd personally be fine with it if other people are, but there's always going to be a part of me that'd be tracking whether people are likely to be non-visibly upset etc.
Now whether a non-work topic being upsetting means people shouldn't discuss it in the workplace is debatable. I think it'd be too draconian to have workplace rules against it (at least by what I understood to be coastal American norms), but having soft norms against it seems probably preferable.
*other examples that might fall into this category: monogamy, body positivity, feminism, Christianity; I'm sure people can generate other examples.