Wikipedia:Move review/Log/2022 October: Difference between revisions
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Add a new entry BELOW THIS COMMENT – copy and fill in the format: {{subst:move review list|page=<PAGE NAME>|rm_page=<REQUEST PAGE NAME>|rm_section=<SECTION>|closer=<CLOSING EDITOR'S USER NAME>|closer_section=<SECTION OF CLOSER'S TALK PAGE DISCUSSION>|reason=<REASON>}}~~<noinclude></noinclude>~~ --> |
Add a new entry BELOW THIS COMMENT – copy and fill in the format: {{subst:move review list|page=<PAGE NAME>|rm_page=<REQUEST PAGE NAME>|rm_section=<SECTION>|closer=<CLOSING EDITOR'S USER NAME>|closer_section=<SECTION OF CLOSER'S TALK PAGE DISCUSSION>|reason=<REASON>}}~~<noinclude></noinclude>~~ --> |
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* '''[[:Franco-German border]]''' – Consensus of reviewers is to '''relist''' the RMs [[France–Germany border]] → [[Franco-German border]] and [[Austria–Italy border]] → [[Austro-Italian border]]. While some of the move review is reviewers' opinions about the wisdom of the move itself, some of that is new information not included in the RM discussions, which would be significant for the RMs. <small>([[Wikipedia:Non-admin closure|non-admin closure]])</small> [[User:Adumbrativus|Adumbrativus]] ([[User talk:Adumbrativus|talk]]) 23:29, 7 November 2022 (UTC) <!--*--> |
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| style="text-align:center;" | ''The following is an archived debate of the [[Wikipedia:Move review|move review]] of the page above. <span style="color:red;">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span>'' |
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:{{move review links|Franco-German border|rm_page={{TALKPAGENAME:Franco-German border}}|rm_section=Requested move 15 October 2022}} ([[User talk:Born2cycle#Disputing your close at Talk:Franco-German border and Talk:Austro-Italian border|Discussion with closer]]) |
:{{move review links|Franco-German border|rm_page={{TALKPAGENAME:Franco-German border}}|rm_section=Requested move 15 October 2022}} ([[User talk:Born2cycle#Disputing your close at Talk:Franco-German border and Talk:Austro-Italian border|Discussion with closer]]) |
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Co-nominating [[Austro-Italian border]], which shares the same RM messages, the same RM editors, and the same RM closer. Both discussions were 2-1 in favor of the move, featuring the nominator, a support, and an oppose (me). The question at hand was whether to rename these articles from the noun form (France–Germany border) to the adjective form (Franco-German border). I believe the close was premature, should have been relisted, did not properly weigh the arguments made, and rests on an inaccurate representation of a 2022 RfC. Reviewers should know that the 2022 RfC is central to the dispute, because it is used to dismiss the argument of the oppose vote ({{tq|I'm sorry, but I think the RFC result trumps the opinion of one user}}). I find the close problematic for the following reasons: (1) The closer's dismissal of the oppose argument is based on the 2022 RfC, whose scope was limited to bilateral relations articles (i.e. Italy–Spain relations). Here we are discussing border articles, and the RM closer acknowledges this limitation in the close. (2) The 2022 RfC closer was pinged and asked on their talk page to contribute to the discussion to solve two conflicting interpretations of the close. This clarification never happened, probably due to the hasty close. (3) The closer of the RM wrote that {{tq|a recent RFC (last year)}} [this year] {{tq|failed to establish consensus that such a consistent naming convention exists}}, which is either incorrect or a poor rewording of the RfC. The RfC concluded that {{tq|editors achieved no consensus to establish either Option A or Option B as the subject-specific naming convention.}} There was no disagreement, however, about the titles within [[:Category:Bilateral relations by country]] being consistently in the noun form before, during, and after the RfC. (4) The closer wrote that {{tq|One user apparently feels that, nevertheless, there is a consistent naming convention applicable here, despite the finding of the RFC, favoring the current title, and CONSISTENT should still apply. I'm sorry, but I think the RFC result trumps the opinion of one user.}} Beyond the fact that I made no such claim regarding a "naming convention" (a naming convention is a guideline vetted by the community; here, I argued that the titles of [[:Category:International borders]] should remain consistent with one another), the idea that a no-consensus RfC could prevent an editor in an unrelated [[WP:AT]] discussion from making a CONSISTENCY-weighted argument in an RfC is beyond me. The RfC states quite the opposite regarding future [[WP:AT]] discussions: {{tq|As I noted on my talk page, I really can't give specific guidance on how arguments involving consistency should be weighed across all bilateral relations, since the discussion really didn't reach a consensus on that. Consistency is a part of the WP:AT and still matters [...]}}) (5) I find another point of divergence between what one support editor states ([https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Talk:Franco-German_border&diff=1117182739&oldid=1117181331 diff]) and the closer upon explanation of their close on their talk page ({{tq|It is true that the RFC "does not contain an explicit or implicit prohibition against making use of consistency arguments"}}). While the wording of the first makes me think they believe the RfC impedes one from making such an argument, the closer disagrees. Both, however, state that CONSISTENCY cannot be the sole argument used, because there is a lack of consensus on the matter. One can also infer the reverse, that a lack of consensus of the matter does not deny CONSISTENCY from being the sole argument used (the trap of "gaps in consensus" is that they can be used to argue anything). At any rate, the relevant policy on the matter, as argued because of the scope and the disclaimers from the RfC close itself, is [[WP:CRITERIA]], which is much more kind on where to give weight when the AT criteria ("goals") are in conflict: {{tq|However, in some cases the choice is not so obvious. It may be necessary to favor one or more of these goals over the others}}. |
Co-nominating [[Austro-Italian border]], which shares the same RM messages, the same RM editors, and the same RM closer. Both discussions were 2-1 in favor of the move, featuring the nominator, a support, and an oppose (me). The question at hand was whether to rename these articles from the noun form (France–Germany border) to the adjective form (Franco-German border). I believe the close was premature, should have been relisted, did not properly weigh the arguments made, and rests on an inaccurate representation of a 2022 RfC. Reviewers should know that the 2022 RfC is central to the dispute, because it is used to dismiss the argument of the oppose vote ({{tq|I'm sorry, but I think the RFC result trumps the opinion of one user}}). I find the close problematic for the following reasons: (1) The closer's dismissal of the oppose argument is based on the 2022 RfC, whose scope was limited to bilateral relations articles (i.e. Italy–Spain relations). Here we are discussing border articles, and the RM closer acknowledges this limitation in the close. (2) The 2022 RfC closer was pinged and asked on their talk page to contribute to the discussion to solve two conflicting interpretations of the close. This clarification never happened, probably due to the hasty close. (3) The closer of the RM wrote that {{tq|a recent RFC (last year)}} [this year] {{tq|failed to establish consensus that such a consistent naming convention exists}}, which is either incorrect or a poor rewording of the RfC. The RfC concluded that {{tq|editors achieved no consensus to establish either Option A or Option B as the subject-specific naming convention.}} There was no disagreement, however, about the titles within [[:Category:Bilateral relations by country]] being consistently in the noun form before, during, and after the RfC. (4) The closer wrote that {{tq|One user apparently feels that, nevertheless, there is a consistent naming convention applicable here, despite the finding of the RFC, favoring the current title, and CONSISTENT should still apply. I'm sorry, but I think the RFC result trumps the opinion of one user.}} Beyond the fact that I made no such claim regarding a "naming convention" (a naming convention is a guideline vetted by the community; here, I argued that the titles of [[:Category:International borders]] should remain consistent with one another), the idea that a no-consensus RfC could prevent an editor in an unrelated [[WP:AT]] discussion from making a CONSISTENCY-weighted argument in an RfC is beyond me. The RfC states quite the opposite regarding future [[WP:AT]] discussions: {{tq|As I noted on my talk page, I really can't give specific guidance on how arguments involving consistency should be weighed across all bilateral relations, since the discussion really didn't reach a consensus on that. Consistency is a part of the WP:AT and still matters [...]}}) (5) I find another point of divergence between what one support editor states ([https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Talk:Franco-German_border&diff=1117182739&oldid=1117181331 diff]) and the closer upon explanation of their close on their talk page ({{tq|It is true that the RFC "does not contain an explicit or implicit prohibition against making use of consistency arguments"}}). While the wording of the first makes me think they believe the RfC impedes one from making such an argument, the closer disagrees. Both, however, state that CONSISTENCY cannot be the sole argument used, because there is a lack of consensus on the matter. One can also infer the reverse, that a lack of consensus of the matter does not deny CONSISTENCY from being the sole argument used (the trap of "gaps in consensus" is that they can be used to argue anything). At any rate, the relevant policy on the matter, as argued because of the scope and the disclaimers from the RfC close itself, is [[WP:CRITERIA]], which is much more kind on where to give weight when the AT criteria ("goals") are in conflict: {{tq|However, in some cases the choice is not so obvious. It may be necessary to favor one or more of these goals over the others}}. |
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*:This would essentially force all closes of contentious discussions to be done by an admin, which... I mean, have you ''seen'' the backlog we have even though we still have NACs performing 90% of closes? Imagine if admins had to do all those! [[User:Red Slash|<span style="color:#FF4131;">Red</span>]] [[User talk:Red Slash|<b><span style="color:#460121;">Slash</span></b>]] 00:31, 3 November 2022 (UTC) |
*:This would essentially force all closes of contentious discussions to be done by an admin, which... I mean, have you ''seen'' the backlog we have even though we still have NACs performing 90% of closes? Imagine if admins had to do all those! [[User:Red Slash|<span style="color:#FF4131;">Red</span>]] [[User talk:Red Slash|<b><span style="color:#460121;">Slash</span></b>]] 00:31, 3 November 2022 (UTC) |
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*::I wonder how many closes over each of the past 6 months have been mine. — ''Ceso femmuin mbolgaig mbung'', ''[[User:Mellohi!|mello]]'''''[[User talk:Mellohi!|hi!]]''' ([[Special:Contributions/Mellohi!|投稿]]) 03:16, 3 November 2022 (UTC) |
*::I wonder how many closes over each of the past 6 months have been mine. — ''Ceso femmuin mbolgaig mbung'', ''[[User:Mellohi!|mello]]'''''[[User talk:Mellohi!|hi!]]''' ([[Special:Contributions/Mellohi!|投稿]]) 03:16, 3 November 2022 (UTC) |
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**{{u|SmokeyJoe|Both agree and disagree}}. My own long-developed opinion is to be readily flexible when it comes to no-consensus outcomes and quite inflexible when I have sensed a consensus, as was the case here. Although as editor {{u|Born2cycle|В²C}} points out, it's always a good idea to give serious consideration to 2nd and 3rd opinions if and when they're expressed, which I do even if they are from editors who were involved in the RM. That's just me; however, this opinion and way of doing things has served me pretty well, and still does. '''''[[User:Paine Ellsworth|<span style="font-size:92%;color:darkblue;font-family:Segoe Script">P.I. Ellsworth</span>]]''''' , [[Editor|<span style="color:black">ed.</span>]] [[User talk:Paine Ellsworth|<sup>put'r there</sup>]] <small>02:10, 7 November 2022 (UTC)</small> |
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*'''Relist''' - I think given the discussion at hand, the close was reasonable and I wouldn't fault that. Certainly if there is an obvious and demonstrated WP:COMMONNAME then that trumps [[WP:CONSISTENT]], as per the policy at [[WP:AT]] - {{xt|"'''When there is no single, obvious name that is demonstrably the most frequently used for the topic by these sources''', editors should reach a consensus as to which title is best by considering these criteria directly"}} (emphasis mine). However, I personally don't really think this topic was given a full enough airing with the low number of participants and the lack of a prior relist, and I think the closer probably should have granted a relist in this instance upon request. In particular, I think the evidence for [[WP:COMMONNAME]] does not fully explore the usage in sources. A simple [https://www.google.com/search?q=germany+france+border Google search] (which seems to more or less cover all the usages, as it bolds all the terms France/French/Franco etc.) suggests that the majority use "French-" rather than "Franco-" for example. Personally I would oppose this move request if relisted, because I think a name which uses the simple commonly-recognized names of the countries concerned is preferable to the slightly arcane "Franco-", but I might be open to other options, for example "French-German border". — [[User:Amakuru|Amakuru]] ([[User talk:Amakuru|talk]]) 09:35, 31 October 2022 (UTC) |
*'''Relist''' - I think given the discussion at hand, the close was reasonable and I wouldn't fault that. Certainly if there is an obvious and demonstrated WP:COMMONNAME then that trumps [[WP:CONSISTENT]], as per the policy at [[WP:AT]] - {{xt|"'''When there is no single, obvious name that is demonstrably the most frequently used for the topic by these sources''', editors should reach a consensus as to which title is best by considering these criteria directly"}} (emphasis mine). However, I personally don't really think this topic was given a full enough airing with the low number of participants and the lack of a prior relist, and I think the closer probably should have granted a relist in this instance upon request. In particular, I think the evidence for [[WP:COMMONNAME]] does not fully explore the usage in sources. A simple [https://www.google.com/search?q=germany+france+border Google search] (which seems to more or less cover all the usages, as it bolds all the terms France/French/Franco etc.) suggests that the majority use "French-" rather than "Franco-" for example. Personally I would oppose this move request if relisted, because I think a name which uses the simple commonly-recognized names of the countries concerned is preferable to the slightly arcane "Franco-", but I might be open to other options, for example "French-German border". — [[User:Amakuru|Amakuru]] ([[User talk:Amakuru|talk]]) 09:35, 31 October 2022 (UTC) |
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*'''Relist''' per Amakuru. While it's usually reasonable to close underattended RMs in favor of majority, Pilaz has expressed a well-reasoned and detailed oppose that should have been honored, and such a "landmark" move (potentially useful as a precedent) should have had a much stronger consensus. [[User:No such user|No such user]] ([[User talk:No such user|talk]]) 09:59, 1 November 2022 (UTC) |
*'''Relist''' per Amakuru. While it's usually reasonable to close underattended RMs in favor of majority, Pilaz has expressed a well-reasoned and detailed oppose that should have been honored, and such a "landmark" move (potentially useful as a precedent) should have had a much stronger consensus. [[User:No such user|No such user]] ([[User talk:No such user|talk]]) 09:59, 1 November 2022 (UTC) |
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*::Yeah, tough question. I would've avoided double closing out of an abundance of caution. [[User:Red Slash|<span style="color:#FF4131;">Red</span>]] [[User talk:Red Slash|<b><span style="color:#460121;">Slash</span></b>]] 21:05, 3 November 2022 (UTC) |
*::Yeah, tough question. I would've avoided double closing out of an abundance of caution. [[User:Red Slash|<span style="color:#FF4131;">Red</span>]] [[User talk:Red Slash|<b><span style="color:#460121;">Slash</span></b>]] 21:05, 3 November 2022 (UTC) |
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* '''Relist '''- the close states that the "RFC (last year) failed to establish consensus that such a consistent naming convention exists for precisely the articles in question here". There is no need for an RFC: the 253 articles in [[:Category:International borders]] are all self-evidently consistent (Foo-Boo) apart from 'Franco-German' and 'Austro-Italian'. (Words such as 'Austro', 'Franco', 'Sino' are surely archaic anyway. Demonyms are bad enough without having to master another even more obscure list.) [[User:Oculi|Oculi]] ([[User talk:Oculi|talk]]) 00:10, 5 November 2022 (UTC) |
* '''Relist '''- the close states that the "RFC (last year) failed to establish consensus that such a consistent naming convention exists for precisely the articles in question here". There is no need for an RFC: the 253 articles in [[:Category:International borders]] are all self-evidently consistent (Foo-Boo) apart from 'Franco-German' and 'Austro-Italian'. (Words such as 'Austro', 'Franco', 'Sino' are surely archaic anyway. Demonyms are bad enough without having to master another even more obscure list.) [[User:Oculi|Oculi]] ([[User talk:Oculi|talk]]) 00:10, 5 November 2022 (UTC) |
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*:I wish that point had been made in the discussion so I could have considered it. This is not an area of titles with which I was personally familiar, so I was going only by what was presented in the discussion. --[[User:Born2cycle|В²C]] [[User_talk:Born2cycle#top|☎]] 15:41, 5 November 2022 (UTC) |
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:::Doesn't matter, because the point was made that the demonyms were the COMMONNAME in sources. We go by sources, not by our POV opinions about usage of demonyms nor anything else. Your closures were sound and reasonable. '''''[[User:Paine Ellsworth|<span style="font-size:92%;color:darkblue;font-family:Segoe Script">P.I. Ellsworth</span>]]''''' , [[Editor|<span style="color:black">ed.</span>]] [[User talk:Paine Ellsworth|<sup>put'r there</sup>]] <small>01:56, 7 November 2022 (UTC)</small> |
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*'''Endorse both.''' <small><uninvolved></small> Wait a year at least and try to garner consensus for other titles. These closures were reasonable and should be sustained, at least for now. '''''[[User:Paine Ellsworth|<span style="font-size:92%;color:darkblue;font-family:Segoe Script">P.I. Ellsworth</span>]]''''' , [[Editor|<span style="color:black">ed.</span>]] [[User talk:Paine Ellsworth|<sup>put'r there</sup>]] <small>01:56, 7 November 2022 (UTC)</small> |
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* '''Relist or overturn to no consensus'''. Considering the the discussion at [[Talk:Germany–Poland border#Requested move 15 October 2022]], there is a strong consensus to keep border articles consistent and use the country names. Most participants in the move review also share that view (the fact that a lot of the editors in both discussions are the same doesn't mean the consensus is any less strong). The small participation at [[Talk:Austro-Italian border]] and [[Talk:Franco-German border]] is not enough to override that consensus. [[User:Vpab15|Vpab15]] ([[User talk:Vpab15|talk]]) 11:34, 7 November 2022 (UTC) |
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*:To clarify, in my opinion there is now strong evidence the consensus to move is not there. That might have not been so clear when the discussions were closed. However, [[User:Pilaz]] did oppose both move requests and I don't think their arguments were given enough weight. The support was far from overwhelming. [[User:Vpab15|Vpab15]] ([[User talk:Vpab15|talk]]) 11:40, 7 November 2022 (UTC) |
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| style="text-align:center;" | ''The above is an archive of the [[Wikipedia:Move review|move review]] of the page listed in the heading. <span style="color:red;">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span>'' |
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====[[:Categories for European professors (many individual categories, no main link)]]==== |
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* '''[[:Categories for European professors (many individual categories, no main link)]]''' – In this rather messy review of a rather messy discussion, two aspects of the closure have been challenged. As to the first – the "academics" vs. "faculty" vs. "academic personnel" vs. something else issue for non-UK/Ireland universities – there is '''no consensus''' on whether the closer acted within discretion, which in this case means the closure stands. As to the second – the "academics of Foo University" vs. "Foo University academics" issue – there is a rough consensus that more discussion would be useful, and it seems the closest approximation of that consensus is to '''relist the non-UK/Ireland categories as a new CfD''' ''solely'' to resolve the "of" issue. (To be clear, the relisted discussion should ''only'' choose between "academics of Foo University" and "Foo University academics"—there is no consensus to disturb the remainder of the closure.) The closure is '''endorsed''' as applied to the UK/Ireland categories. I'd appreciate it if someone would take care of the technical work of carrying out the partial relist. Please continue to hold off on implementing the closure until the new CfD is resolved. [[User:Extraordinary Writ|Extraordinary Writ]] ([[User talk:Extraordinary Writ|talk]]) 01:54, 18 December 2022 (UTC) |
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** Relisted at [[Wikipedia:Categories for_discussion/Log/2022 December 26#Academics in Europe]] – [[User:Fayenatic london|Fayenatic]] [[User talk:Fayenatic london|'''<span style="color:#FF0000;">L</span>'''ondon]] 16:27, 26 December 2022 (UTC) |
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| style="text-align:center;" | ''The following is an archived debate of the [[Wikipedia:Move review|move review]] of the page above. <span style="color:red;">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span>'' |
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::<small>{{diff|Wikipedia:Closure requests#Wikipedia:Move review/Log/2022 October#Categories for European professors (many individual categories, no main link)|next|1122872433|''Closure requested''}}.</small> |
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Low-participation disruption of long-standing consensus to use "X faculty" on biographical articles about professors at institutions named X, everywhere except for UK/commonwealth universities, where UK-English proponents insist on "Academics of X". No consensus evident in discussion. The close chooses a path not among the ones actually proposed, with unclear support. It makes our naming system for people associated with universities even more inconsistent in two ways. First, now we would use both the "Academics of X" and "X alumni" word order for some universities, "Academics of X" and "Alumni of X" for UK universities, and "X faculty" and "X alumni" for some universities, giving a three-way inconsistency in place of the status-quo two-way inconsistency. And second, there is no obvious rhyme or reason to which universities would use one naming scheme vs another. Many of the opinions in support of this move violate [[WP:ENGVAR]] by pushing a change from American-English wording (where "academics of X" is wrong because "academics" means "academic activities", in reference to other university activities like sports, and the more specific "academic personnel" is overly broad for these categories) to English-English wording (where "X faculty" is wrong because "faculty" means an organizational subunit, not a person) for topics that have no close national ties to either. The discussion also confused two issues that should have been kept separate, namely what word do we use for professors and do we put that word before or after the name of the university. Closer has put the moves on hold for the discussion but otherwise refused to reconsider the decision. Should have been no consensus, no move. —[[User:David Eppstein|David Eppstein]] ([[User talk:David Eppstein|talk]]) 21:30, 23 October 2022 (UTC) |
Low-participation disruption of long-standing consensus to use "X faculty" on biographical articles about professors at institutions named X, everywhere except for UK/commonwealth universities, where UK-English proponents insist on "Academics of X". No consensus evident in discussion. The close chooses a path not among the ones actually proposed, with unclear support. It makes our naming system for people associated with universities even more inconsistent in two ways. First, now we would use both the "Academics of X" and "X alumni" word order for some universities, "Academics of X" and "Alumni of X" for UK universities, and "X faculty" and "X alumni" for some universities, giving a three-way inconsistency in place of the status-quo two-way inconsistency. And second, there is no obvious rhyme or reason to which universities would use one naming scheme vs another. Many of the opinions in support of this move violate [[WP:ENGVAR]] by pushing a change from American-English wording (where "academics of X" is wrong because "academics" means "academic activities", in reference to other university activities like sports, and the more specific "academic personnel" is overly broad for these categories) to English-English wording (where "X faculty" is wrong because "faculty" means an organizational subunit, not a person) for topics that have no close national ties to either. The discussion also confused two issues that should have been kept separate, namely what word do we use for professors and do we put that word before or after the name of the university. Closer has put the moves on hold for the discussion but otherwise refused to reconsider the decision. Should have been no consensus, no move. —[[User:David Eppstein|David Eppstein]] ([[User talk:David Eppstein|talk]]) 21:30, 23 October 2022 (UTC) |
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*(As closer) I set out the rationale for my close briefly in '''[[Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2022_October_3#Academic_personnel_in_Europe|the CFD]]''', having justified this at greater length on [[User_talk:Fayenatic_london#Academics_of...|my talk page]] as linked above. With 14 participants, this CFD discussion rather well-attended by current standards. As already discussed on my talk page, there will only temporarily be a three-way inconsistency between alumni and academics categories; where a university will have "Academics of X" and "X alumni" after this CFD, it is envisaged that the alumni categories will be nominated for renaming to "Alumni of X", restoring the status-quo two-way inconsistency. – [[User:Fayenatic london|Fayenatic]] [[User talk:Fayenatic london|'''<span style="color:#FF0000;">L</span>'''ondon]] 22:16, 23 October 2022 (UTC) |
*(As closer) I set out the rationale for my close briefly in '''[[Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2022_October_3#Academic_personnel_in_Europe|the CFD]]''', having justified this at greater length on [[User_talk:Fayenatic_london#Academics_of...|my talk page]] as linked above. With 14 participants, this CFD discussion rather well-attended by current standards. As already discussed on my talk page, there will only temporarily be a three-way inconsistency between alumni and academics categories; where a university will have "Academics of X" and "X alumni" after this CFD, it is envisaged that the alumni categories will be nominated for renaming to "Alumni of X", restoring the status-quo two-way inconsistency. – [[User:Fayenatic london|Fayenatic]] [[User talk:Fayenatic london|'''<span style="color:#FF0000;">L</span>'''ondon]] 22:16, 23 October 2022 (UTC) |
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** That would seem an '''excellent idea''' (omitting the UK/Ireland ones). [[User:Oculi|Oculi]] ([[User talk:Oculi|talk]]) 11:40, 3 November 2022 (UTC) |
** That would seem an '''excellent idea''' (omitting the UK/Ireland ones). [[User:Oculi|Oculi]] ([[User talk:Oculi|talk]]) 11:40, 3 November 2022 (UTC) |
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*'''Endorse''' tough and well-reasoned close which produced a reasonable way forward. There was strong consensus to move away from "faculty", the word that is at best ambiguous and at worst misleading for everyone in Western Hemisphere, not just Britons and Irish. Among the !votes, the "academics" formulation was favored as the best alternative. I see "Academics of X" vs "X academics" as a secondary issue, but a significant portion of posters included explicit preference for the former, so I don't see a big deal with either. '''No prejudice''' against a fresh nomination of "Academics of X" -> "X academics" but I see it as a coin-toss issue that should be judged mainly on terms of [[WP:CONSISTENCY]]. [[User:No such user|No such user]] ([[User talk:No such user|talk]]) 08:27, 2 November 2022 (UTC) |
*'''Endorse''' tough and well-reasoned close which produced a reasonable way forward. There was strong consensus to move away from "faculty", the word that is at best ambiguous and at worst misleading for everyone in Western Hemisphere, not just Britons and Irish. Among the !votes, the "academics" formulation was favored as the best alternative. I see "Academics of X" vs "X academics" as a secondary issue, but a significant portion of posters included explicit preference for the former, so I don't see a big deal with either. '''No prejudice''' against a fresh nomination of "Academics of X" -> "X academics" but I see it as a coin-toss issue that should be judged mainly on terms of [[WP:CONSISTENCY]]. [[User:No such user|No such user]] ([[User talk:No such user|talk]]) 08:27, 2 November 2022 (UTC) |
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*I am willing to make a procedural nomination to reopen this, to choose between "Academics of Foo University" and "Foo University academics". To minimise work I suggest leaving the existing CFD templates in place on the category pages, and adding a link under the heading of the old CFD discussion to the new one. I do not see any justification for excluding the UK and Ireland from this Europe-wide discussion, so I would revert the removal of CFD templates from those countries, as well as the countries beginning with A (which I had already processed before this review). – [[User:Fayenatic london|Fayenatic]] [[User talk:Fayenatic london|'''<span style="color:#FF0000;">L</span>'''ondon]] 13:17, 5 November 2022 (UTC) |
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** The problem is that we have apples - the UK/Ireland categories, all named 'Academics of XXX' without any objections or inconsistencies since 2006 (see [[Wikipedia:Categories for deletion/Log/2006 December 21#Academics of UK Universities|2006 December 21#Academics of UK Universities]]) - and oranges - the rest of Europe, now more or less consistently named 'XXX faculty'. Those who think that the word order doesn't matter (coin toss) have not been paying attention at cfd: UK editors (mostly) say 'Academics of' is much better and non-UK editors (mostly) say that 'XXX academics' is shorter, perfectly grammatical and just as clear. In any case there is a consensus for keeping 'academics of' for the UK/Ireland and I can't see any point in relisting these. At least relist them as a separate nom. There were endless and contentious arguments about 'Alumni of YYY' versus 'YYY alumni' and the UK after a great struggle managed to retain 'Alumni of' - these are huge cans of vigorous worms, best kept securely lidded. Why is it so important to have complete consistency for the whole of Europe? As Marcocapelle (I think) has pointed out it is US-English that is taught in much of Europe. [[User:Oculi|Oculi]] ([[User talk:Oculi|talk]]) 00:18, 6 November 2022 (UTC) |
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* I feel obliged to note that there was absolutely no "long-standing consensus" to begin with - what we have is an organic hodgepodge that has been disputed over a long time, but the mechanics of categorization change processes are apparently so oppressive that there is no new compromise possible. The term "[[academic personnel]]" has been in main space [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Academic_personnel&diff=883680447&oldid=880901473&diffmode=source for three years now following a very simple change], but we can't seem to be able to muster the collective composure to make something like that happen in category space. All of these processes are supposed to be helping [[WP:CONS]], but it's just not happening... --[[User:Joy|Joy [shallot]]] ([[User talk:Joy|talk]]) 09:39, 6 November 2022 (UTC) |
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** The article [[Academic personnel]] is a negligible stub with 2 sources, both for India, and should be deleted. [[User:Oculi|Oculi]] ([[User talk:Oculi|talk]]) 11:12, 6 November 2022 (UTC) |
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**:Your dismissal of that merely continues to contribute to the fact that it's so easy to obstruct any progress in these kinds of discussions, and that there is no long-standing consensus. I'm going to restrain myself from further comments. --[[User:Joy|Joy [shallot]]] ([[User talk:Joy|talk]]) 21:16, 6 November 2022 (UTC) |
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*'''Endorse.''' <small><uninvolved></small> This was a good call and a reasonable closure made by an experienced and trusted admin, and officially challenged by another experienced and trusted admin. After reading it all, these category page renames appear to be a step in the right direction. Sometimes change is the hardest thing to accept; sometimes that is what we must do anyway. Nobody here is really right nor wrong, no winners nor losers. We're all here to improve Wikipedia, so let's see how these fly and get on with it''!'' '''''[[User:Paine Ellsworth|<span style="font-size:92%;color:darkblue;font-family:Segoe Script">P.I. Ellsworth</span>]]''''' , [[Editor|<span style="color:black">ed.</span>]] [[User talk:Paine Ellsworth|<sup>put'r there</sup>]] <small>01:33, 7 November 2022 (UTC)</small> |
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*'''Overturn''' with '''exception for UK-based universities'''. I don't see any consensus in the discussion, and the arguments on ENGVAR apply only convincingly to the UK, not the rest of Europe. While Peterkingiron did make an argument on "what is the terminology actually used in Europe", David Eppstein has shown evidence here that "faculty" does indeed appear to be a term in use in Europe on better grounds, even if belated (and I can't fault him for not bringing it up immediately at the CFD, since it is very surprising the CFD closed the way it did). Additionally, even if the argument is taken seriously, that does not change the problem that the new "Academics of" terminology (how did this happen rather than the proposed Academic personnel?!) is unacceptably vague and also a scope change. We already sometimes have exceptions to ENGVAR either if there are opportunities for commonality, or if one of the AmEn/BrEn terms has a large chance of potential confusion. "Academics of University X" would presumably include people such as people with a title "researcher" (e.g. [[Research fellow]]s), graduate students, and post-docs; "faculty" is much more specifically professors. Being consistent in what a category means is good, especially as subcategories of a larger structure. '''Allow renomination''' on a country-by-country basis with the expectation that the nominator shows evidence that the "faculty" term is overwhelmingly in the minority in that country - Santasa99 brought up that Croatia / Serbia might be such a case, for example. (As a side note, I'd potentially be in favor of overturning the earlier CFDs in the series as well, but I'll refrain from comment having not looked closely - maybe there's a case for Finland, but it'd have to be specific.) [[User:SnowFire|SnowFire]] ([[User talk:SnowFire|talk]]) 17:57, 23 November 2022 (UTC) |
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Latest revision as of 16:27, 26 December 2022
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The following is an archived debate of the move review of the page above. Please do not modify it. |
Co-nominating Austro-Italian border, which shares the same RM messages, the same RM editors, and the same RM closer. Both discussions were 2-1 in favor of the move, featuring the nominator, a support, and an oppose (me). The question at hand was whether to rename these articles from the noun form (France–Germany border) to the adjective form (Franco-German border). I believe the close was premature, should have been relisted, did not properly weigh the arguments made, and rests on an inaccurate representation of a 2022 RfC. Reviewers should know that the 2022 RfC is central to the dispute, because it is used to dismiss the argument of the oppose vote ( In conclusion, we have a RM close based on an RfC which is out of scope, where the RfC closer couldn't participate, which closed as no consensus, whose rephrasing was misleading, whose authority is misconstrued, and whose recommendation is, essentially, to follow WP:AT. I'll leave you pondering on why another editor has called a similar move by the same RM closer a supervote, and why the RM closer chose to self-revert there but not here. Pilaz (talk) 03:41, 31 October 2022 (UTC)
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The above is an archive of the move review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it. |
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The following is an archived debate of the move review of the page above. Please do not modify it. |
Low-participation disruption of long-standing consensus to use "X faculty" on biographical articles about professors at institutions named X, everywhere except for UK/commonwealth universities, where UK-English proponents insist on "Academics of X". No consensus evident in discussion. The close chooses a path not among the ones actually proposed, with unclear support. It makes our naming system for people associated with universities even more inconsistent in two ways. First, now we would use both the "Academics of X" and "X alumni" word order for some universities, "Academics of X" and "Alumni of X" for UK universities, and "X faculty" and "X alumni" for some universities, giving a three-way inconsistency in place of the status-quo two-way inconsistency. And second, there is no obvious rhyme or reason to which universities would use one naming scheme vs another. Many of the opinions in support of this move violate WP:ENGVAR by pushing a change from American-English wording (where "academics of X" is wrong because "academics" means "academic activities", in reference to other university activities like sports, and the more specific "academic personnel" is overly broad for these categories) to English-English wording (where "X faculty" is wrong because "faculty" means an organizational subunit, not a person) for topics that have no close national ties to either. The discussion also confused two issues that should have been kept separate, namely what word do we use for professors and do we put that word before or after the name of the university. Closer has put the moves on hold for the discussion but otherwise refused to reconsider the decision. Should have been no consensus, no move. —David Eppstein (talk) 21:30, 23 October 2022 (UTC)
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The above is an archive of the move review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it. |
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The following is an archived debate of the move review of the page above. Please do not modify it. |
Waiving the closer discussion requirement, since I was the original closer. Originally, I closed it in favour of moving as I believed there was consensus to add "NATO-led" to the title. However, Amakuru opposed the move while it was sitting in RM/TR and requested reopening. I could not reopen it at the time as I had fallen asleep. XTheBedrockX proceeded to non-admin-vacate the closure before I could wake up. I would like to ask for further input on whether the RM should stay reopened or the original close should stand. — Ceso femmuin mbolgaig mbung, mellohi! (投稿) 15:46, 22 October 2022 (UTC)
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The above is an archive of the move review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it. |
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The following is an archived debate of the move review of the page above. Please do not modify it. |
I am an uninvolved editor who just saw this page has been moved. There was no consensus to move the page from Gautama Buddha to The Buddha. All of the detailed and rich comments were made by those who opposed the move while those supporting the move offered nothing much. Even a simple !vote count shows that there was no consensus for the page move. If we were to think that "who is more popular" with the last name, then Barack Obama should be moved to Obama but I don't see if that is going to happen and that is also why it makes no sense to move "Gautama Buddha" to "The Buddha".--Yoonadue (talk) 04:10, 22 October 2022 (UTC)
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The above is an archive of the move review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it. |
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The following is an archived debate of the move review of the page above. Please do not modify it. |
Closer either did not follow the spirit and intent of WP:RMCI or was unaware of significant additional information not discussed in the page move discussion. While the previous move discussion is mentioned, none of the relevant policies or points raised in that discussion are addressed in the new move request. There is a pile-on to one interpretation of one policy; however, that interpretation is reached by ignoring all the points and additional policies raised in the previous move discussion which contradict it. The discussion should be reopened and relisted. Darker Dreams (talk) 14:46, 19 October 2022 (UTC)
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The above is an archive of the move review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it. |
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The following is an archived debate of the move review of the page above. Please do not modify it. |
Genuinely the most questionable close I've ever seen an admin make in my entire wikipedia career. They completely disregarded everyone else and just did whatever the hell they wanted to do. Horse Eye's Back (talk) 15:11, 3 October 2022 (UTC) Horse Eye's Back (talk) 15:11, 3 October 2022 (UTC)
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The above is an archive of the move review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it. |
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The following is an archived debate of the move review of the page above. Please do not modify it. |
The closing editor acknowledged that the "discussion and arguments seem fairly balanced in number" but nevertheless closed the request as "Move." They said that this decision was made partially because "none of those that oppose have ever edited the article." (As a side note, this is not true, u:Tritomex in fact has a few edits). I believe that this closure does not represent the consensus - or rather the lack of consensus in favour of the move. I also think that this reasoning runs counter to the spirit of move requests which are supposed to attract editors who have a fresh perspective. Alaexis¿question? 12:38, 3 October 2022 (UTC)
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The above is an archive of the move review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it. |
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The following is an archived debate of the move review of the page above. Please do not modify it. |
I requested this move as the current title indicates that there is one central election on one day (like 2018 Pakistani and 2019 British election pages); however, there are dozens of different elections in Nigeria throughout 2023 (from February to at least November) making this page more comparable to the 2020 United States elections (especially as they are both presidential systems with a large number of disparate elections throughout the year). Also, as the component elections in this page already have unique pages, it is no longer like the 2019 page where there was no separate election page. In accordance with other like pages, such as the 2022 Nigerian elections, 2023 Nigerian elections is more accurate. When a user first moved the page to its current name, it was clear that the user was not at all familiar with the content; when I requested it be moved back to its stable "2023 Nigerian elections", a different opponent pivoted to a content discussion before refusing to engage so the discussion was closed. This cycle of ghosting discussion continued a dozen more times over months to avoid justifying the move. After RFCs, it was suggested to open this new move request, the RFCs were 2-1 in favor of the move and 3-1 against the opposing page split proposal; the RM was then 2-3 but the discussion was ongoing as I had just gone to an opponent's talk page to solicit a response. This RM never should have been closed as both sides agree that the status quo is incorrect as the title does not fit the page's content, some sort of change has to happen and it can't happen if closers continue to end discussion before anything gets resolved. And if it is closed, it obviously is not "no move" as the argument against the move has been opposed 3 to 1. Watercheetah99 (talk) 17:22, 1 October 2022 (UTC)
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The above is an archive of the move review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it. |