Sam Johnson (born 14 February 1989) is a social entrepreneur from Christchurch, New Zealand.[1] Johnson is known as the founder of the Student Volunteer Army[2] which mobilised 11,000 students to assist the cleanup following the Christchurch earthquakes and has continued as a nationwide volunteering movement[3]
Johnson is an international thought leader in developing models of community that build resilience through volunteering and local action.[4][5][6][7]
Following the 2010 and 2011 earthquakes, Johnson founded the Student Volunteer Army to assist residents with the clean up of liquefaction caused by the earthquakes.[9][10] The Student Volunteer Army was managed by a core team of 15 people and a wider administration of 70 people who managed the three core operations which the SVA focused on; battalions, squadrons and street teams.[11] There were 13,000 students volunteering per week.[12]
Johnson worked to assist mobilising young Nepalese volunteers following the Nepal earthquakes in 2015.[14]
Johnson and the Student Volunteer Army worked with other young people alongside the UNISDR in preparation for 3rd World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction.[15]
Johnson declared in July 2011 that he had no intention to run for higher public office in the near future.[18] In January 2013, it was reported that he may consider running for Christchurch City Council in the October 2013 local body elections.[19]The Press reported on 20 April 2013 that Lianne Dalziel would challenge Bob Parker for the Christchurch mayoralty, and that she had asked Johnson to be her running mate, with a view of Johnson becoming deputy mayor. Johnson eventually decided against running, saying it wasn't the "right thing for me right now".[20]
Johnson is a founding Trustee of the Ministry of Awesome, a Christchurch-based idea incubator.[21]
Social enterprise and business
In 2016, Johnson launched a social enterprise focused on the alarming rates of social isolation in New Zealand [22] which then joined forces with technology platform Mycare to improve the New Zealand care and support sector.[23]
Awards and celebrities
Johnson has received a Special Leadership Award from the Sir Peter Blake Trust[24] and was named Young New Zealander of the Year[25] and Public Relations Institute of New Zealand (PRINZ) Communicator of the Year in 2012.[26]
Johnson is openly gay and married to husband Tyler Brummer. The couple live in Auckland. In 2022, they announced that they were looking for a surrogate in order to have a child.[30]
References
^"10th Anniversary Edition". Latitude Magazine – Canterbury's Own Lifestyle Magazine. Retrieved 5 June 2018.