Parliaments In A Pandemic.

AuthorStos, Will
PositionLetter from the Editor

Did anyone have worldwide pandemic on their 2020 Bingo card? Yet here we are, months into an event that has profoundly affected our personal and professional lives.

Many non-essential workers were sent home to help limit the spread of COVID-19--some were laid off completely while others transitioned into working from home. Schools were shut down and many students experienced what has probably been the longest March Break ever. And our institutions, including our parliaments, adapted to a world where public health requirements for physical distancing changed everything from seating arrangements in chambers to videoconferencing proceedings to opposition members being sworn in to cabinet committees.

In this issue, we review some aspects of how parliaments and parliamentary staff have responded to working through a pandemic. Samara Canada's Mike Morden summarizes the results of a survey the Canadian Parliamentary Review distributed to the table clerks on how parliamentary sittings and proceedings have changed. Examining Canadian and international examples of parliamentary modifications, Steven Chaplin suggests that hybrid sittings (a mix of in-person and virtual participation) combined with a greater role for committee work could become a workable medium-term solution for parliaments during a pandemic.

Elsewhere in the issue, authors explore how...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT