Samara (charitable organisation)

Samara Canada
Founded 2009 (2009)[1]
Founder Alison Loat, Michael MacMillan
Focus Civic Engagement, Citizen participation
Location
Area served
Canada
Website www.samaracanada.com

Samara (Samara Canada) is a nonprofit, non-partisan advocacy group for citizen engagement and participation.[3] Samara carries out independent research on the state of Canada's democratic institutions and attitudes Canadians hold about public life. Its efforts to date have focused on the federal level, though the organization's findings have application to provincial and local politics in Canada. Samara's aim is to provide resources to citizens in better understanding their political structures.

Samara's efforts fall into three categories: Samara Democracy Reports, Samara in the Classroom, and Democracy Talks. The Democracy Reports are independent research conducted by Samara to expose aspects of Canadian public life to scrutiny. The first report in the series was the MP Exit Interviews[4] which surveyed former Members of Parliament on how they entered politics and viewed their role. Since that time, reports have been released on other topics such as those disengaged from the political process, and the role of political parties. Samara in the Classroom provides resources to middle and secondary school teachers, as well as professors and post-secondary students on how to more effectively teach people about Canada's democracy. The Democracy Talks series is an outreach program to help citizens connect to their democracy.

Origin of Name and Mandate

The organization is named after a samara, "the winged helicopter seed that falls from the maple tree." They note that as the seed of the tree whose leaves are the symbol of Canada, the samara "is a symbol of Canada, and a reminder that from small seeds, big ideas can grow."[5]

Samara Democracy Reports and Research

To date Samara has released numerous reports, including:

  • The Real Outsiders: Politically Disengaged Views on Politics and Democracy
  • The Neighbourhoods of #cdnpoli
  • Occupiers and Legislators: A Snapshot of Political Media Coverage
  • Who's the Boss?: Canadians' Views on their Democracy
  • Lost in Translation or Just Lost?: Canadians' Priorities and the House of Commons
  • 50 Ways to Redesign Parliament
  • The Real Outsiders
  • By Invitation Only

They have also conducted and released annual polls around democratic engagement and the political system in Canada starting in 2012.

Impact

Samara's research, reports and events have had a profound effect on the political landscape of Canada. The 2012 report, Who's the Boss?: Canadians' Views on their Democracy received wide media coverage across the country for its revelations that of growing dissatisfaction with the House of Commons and MPs. Their fifth report, Lost in Translation or Just Lost?: Canadians' Priorities and the House of Commons has been followed by a major series of pieces in The Globe and Mail newspaper called "Reinventing Parliament" [6]

Following the release of the MP Exit Interviews reforms were made to the MP orientation to take into account some of the shortcomings identified in the report which was implemented following the 2011 Canadian federal election.[3]

Tragedy in the Commons

In early 2014, Samara Canada co-founders Alison Loat and Michael MacMillan published their MP exit interviews in a book titled Tragedy in the Commons: Former Members of Parliament Speak out About Canada's Failing Democracy (Toronto: Random House Canada, 2014). In the book, Loat and MacMillan argue that the Canadian House of Commons is in a crisis period requiring fundamental changes to the way the political institutions and parties operate.

References

  1. "About Us". Samara Canada. 2009. Retrieved February 11, 2013.
  2. "Contact Us". Samara Canada. Archived from the original on 2013-02-21. Retrieved February 11, 2013.
  3. 1 2 "About Us". Samara Canada. Retrieved February 11, 2013.
  4. "MP Exit Interviews". Samara Canada. Retrieved February 11, 2013.
  5. http://www.samaracanada.com/about-us/about-us
  6. "Reinventing Parliament: What's the one thing you would change?". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved February 11, 2013.
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