Community Governance
Community Governance: Collective Decision Making
Community governance enables token holders and participants to collectively make decisions about project direction and protocol changes. It's like a democracy where community members vote on important issues.
Community governance refers to decision-making systems where project participants have input and voting rights over protocol changes, resource allocation, and strategic direction. This distributes control among stakeholders rather than centralizing it with founders.
How Community Governance Works
Proposal systems allow community members to suggest changes, improvements, or strategic decisions for consideration.
Voting mechanisms enable token holders or participants to express preferences through various democratic processes.
Implementation procedures execute approved decisions through smart contracts, development work, or operational changes.
[IMAGE: Community governance process showing proposal creation → community discussion → voting → decision implementation]
Real-World Examples
- Compound governance where COMP token holders vote on protocol parameters and upgrades
- Uniswap governance through UNI token voting on fee structures and development funding
- DAO governance systems that manage treasuries and protocol decisions through community participation
Why Beginners Should Care
Democratic participation in shaping projects rather than being passive users of centrally controlled systems.
Alignment benefits as community governance can ensure projects serve user interests over founder profits.
Responsibility understanding since participation in governance requires research and consideration of complex proposals.
Related Terms: DAO, Governance, Voting, Democratic Governance
