LaFontaine-Baldwin Symposium

The LaFontaine-Baldwin Symposium is a Canadian forum created through the joint effort of John Ralston Saul and the Dominion Institute. Founded in 2000, the Symposium's purpose is to stimulate debate about the historical antecedents and future shape of the Canadian democracy. Canada's existence and democratic foundation owes a great deal to the partnership of two 19th century political visionaries, Louis-Hippolyte LaFontaine and Robert Baldwin, the first democratically elected Joint Premiers of the Province of Canada. The Symposium's annual venue honours these two great political reformers.

Statue of symposium's namesakes Robert Baldwin and Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine, on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario.

According to Jocelyn Létourneau, a history professor at Université Laval in Quebec City and senior researcher at the Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies of Francophone Literature, Arts and Traditions in North America, "the myths we (Canadians) used in building our nation have made us victims of our past. And, it's not easy to break the cycle."

An annual lecture at the Symposium is broadcast on CBC Radio One's Ideas.

Past speakers

gollark: One day Amazon is going to have ICBMs for some reason, and become a major military power.
gollark: Prime+ would only allow you delivery from less cool ground-based launch sites.
gollark: Prime++ would get you orbital *unshielded* delivery.
gollark: Yes, so you would need to buy an Amazon Prime+++ subscription.
gollark: They would probably need parachutes or something too, or they might destroy things.


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