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{% extends "conduct/base.html" %}
{% load date_format i18n %}
{% block title %}{% translate "Django Code of Conduct - Changes" %}{% endblock %}
{% block og_title %}{% translate "Django Code of Conduct - Changes" %}{% endblock %}
{% block og_description %}{% translate "Changes to the Code of Conduct" %}{% endblock %}
{% block content %}
<h1>{% translate "Django Code of Conduct - Changes" %}</h1>
<h2>{% translate "Change control process" %}</h2>
<p>
{% blocktranslate trimmed %}
We're (mostly) programmers, so we'll track changes to the code of conduct and
associated documents the same way we track changes to code. All changes will
be proposed via a pull request to the
<a href="https://github.com/django/code-of-conduct">Django Code of Conduct
repository on GitHub</a>. Changes will be reviewed by the code of conduct
working group first, and then sent to the DSF and the Django community for
comment. We'll hold a comment period of at least one month. Changes to the Code
of Conduct itself will be voted on by the DSF board; other documentation changes
will be approved by the code of conduct working group. Approved changes will be
merged, published, and noted in <a href="https://github.com/django/code-of-conduct/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md">
our changelog</a>.{% endblocktranslate %}</p>
<p>
{% blocktranslate trimmed %}
This only applies to material changes; changes that don't affect the intent
(typo fixes, re-wordings, etc.) can be made immediately{% endblocktranslate %}</p>
<p>
{% blocktranslate trimmed %}
A complete list of changes can always be found
<a href="https://github.com/django/code-of-conduct/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md">on
GitHub</a>.{% endblocktranslate %}</p>
{% endblock content %}
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