About Adhocracy
While democracy as a form of governance is often credited with creating very complex and well discussed decisions, it is not generally considered to be terribly efficient. Decision-making is sluggish at best and once a decision is made, improving the decisions is hard and often frowned upon.
This is especially true for direct democracies, where decisions aren't made by representatives but by the people themselves.
Adhocracy uses social technologies to change the rules for democracy: it makes democratic decisions as easy as editing a wiki, as fast as twitter and as flexible as the net itself.
This means that democracy becomes a feasible mode of decision-making for groups that couldn't have it before. Anyone can open an Adhocracy in just a few moments.
There, members can propose a problem solution or a piece of regulation for the group in just a few instants and get the whole group to discuss, develop and approve their idea. This adds direct legitimation to all decisions, giving them both internal and external credence.
