- Revise our code of conduct. Some aspects of it are problematic for people (myself included). I'll raise an issue on this shortly.
- Develop an action plan to help organisers of events deal with incidents. See: http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/Conference_anti-harassment/Responding_to_reports
- Get some members of our community to take a training course on how to deal with incidents properly. Something like: http://www.nswrapecrisis.com.au/Training.aspx could be appropriate. This will help in dealing with any incidents properly. It will also mean that people will have more trust that we will respond to incidents properly.
- Announce the names of contact persons/duty officers before events such as RailsCamp and RubyConf.
- Keep working on bulding mentoring programs for new developers along the lines of RailsGirls/Installfest/DevelopmentHub. We need Australian-local equivalents of RailsBridge, DevChix, TransHack etc. Some of this needs to be owned by minorities, but we need to work on creating safe supportive spaces for everyone.
- Create a new speaker mentoring program so we have more local talent able to speak at the next RubyConf. We've got a year to build an awesome lineup.
- Work to create junior and minority friendly roles in our companies.
- Consider moving RoRo Sydney to a safer location which encourages presentations over socialisation. (Although we should keep social activities afterwards and emphasise other things like #fridayat4)
None of this improves diversity directly, but the goal we should have is to create safe, supportive and welcoming environments for everyone.
A thought on point 5, and stuff being 'owned by minorities', I've been thinking lately that we should try and get more RailsGirls past participants to be mentors for future RailsGirls & RailsGirlsNexts.
You need to be pretty experienced to turn up and teach one of those things impromptu, but if you train specifically for it, then you only need to learn the content and commonly asked questions for that particular course, which is far more achievable. And of course, if you don't know something, you can just ask one of the more experienced mentors.
Would be a great learning experience, and would be inspiring for participants if most of the mentors were girls.
If people are doubting wether they are good enough to mentor, we could give the role a kind of less intimidating name, like 'assistant mentor' or 'facilitator' or whatever.
Could have a workshop or training screencasts available to prepare the mentors. Could specifically ask those graduates who we think are up to it, to mentor at the next one.