Democratic Governance
Democratic Governance: Community-Controlled Decision Making
Democratic governance enables community members to participate in project decisions through voting and proposal systems. It's like having a democracy where token holders are the citizens.
Democratic governance refers to decision-making systems where community members have voting rights and influence over project direction, protocol changes, and resource allocation. Token holdings typically determine voting power.
How Democratic Governance Works
Proposal systems allow community members to suggest changes, improvements, or strategic decisions for consideration.
Voting mechanisms enable token holders to express preferences on proposals through various democratic processes.
Implementation procedures execute approved decisions through smart contracts, development work, or operational changes.
[IMAGE: Democratic governance process showing proposal submission → community discussion → voting → implementation]
Real-World Examples
- MakerDAO governance where MKR token holders vote on stability fees, collateral types, and protocol parameters
- Compound governance allowing COMP holders to modify interest rates, add assets, and upgrade protocols
- Uniswap governance through UNI token voting on fee structures, treasury allocation, and protocol development
Why Beginners Should Care
Community control ensures projects serve user interests rather than solely benefiting founders or early investors.
Participation opportunities for influencing project direction through token ownership and active governance engagement.
Decentralization benefits from distributed decision-making that reduces single points of control or failure.
Related Terms: Governance, DAO, Voting, Community
