Re point 4, CEA’s role is different as it pertains to CEA events than for non-CEA events. Only in the former case does it speak with the power of an event organizer, which gives it a clear basis to regulate.
(I would extend CEA’s “jurisdiction” as organizer to include everything an event attendee does in the city/region of the event immediately before, during, and immediately after the event.)
So any statement about conduct in non-CEA spaces should probably be separate from the code of conduct at CEA events.
Re point 4, CEA’s role is different as it pertains to CEA events than for non-CEA events. Only in the former case does it speak with the power of an event organizer, which gives it a clear basis to regulate.
(I would extend CEA’s “jurisdiction” as organizer to include everything an event attendee does in the city/region of the event immediately before, during, and immediately after the event.)
So any statement about conduct in non-CEA spaces should probably be separate from the code of conduct at CEA events.