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Canada: the State of the Federation 1998/99: How Canadians Connect [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 277 pages, kaal: 624 g
  • Sari: Canada: the State of the Federation
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jun-1999
  • Kirjastus: Queen's University
  • ISBN-10: 0889117810
  • ISBN-13: 9780889117815
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 277 pages, kaal: 624 g
  • Sari: Canada: the State of the Federation
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jun-1999
  • Kirjastus: Queen's University
  • ISBN-10: 0889117810
  • ISBN-13: 9780889117815
Teised raamatud teemal:
Canada: The State of the Federation 1998 is a timely exploration of the current state of the ties that bind the federation together.


The last twenty or so years have seen a different kind of state emerge in Canada and elsewhere. The questioning of Keynesian macroeconomic policy in light of crises in Western economies coupled with the rise of neo-conservative and neo-liberal politics (and the attendant rethinking of the modern state's regulatory and redistributive roles) has resulted in significant restructuring and retrenchment of the state in Canada, both federal and provincial. Similarly, Canadians' sense of citizenship has undergone significant changes that need to be explored. Canada: The State of the Federation 1998 is a timely exploration of the current state of the ties that bind the federation together. Are they strong enough to survive in the context of a smaller (or at least different) state? Is Canadians' sense of citizenship sufficiently vibrant to maintain itself in an increasingly globalized world? How have Canada's civic and political institutions responded to these challenges? Is "Canadian culture," however defined, still a viable concept in the midst of the kinds of communications advances we have seen of late? How are global economic forces changing the east-west economic linkages that have been fostered since Confederation and how will Canada fit into a globalized political economy? These are but a few of the questions that the volume explores. Contributors include Reg Whitaker (York), Avigail Eisenberg (UBC), Ted Magder (NYU), Florian Sauvageau (Laval), Pierre Juneau (former chair of the CRTC), John Helliwell (UBC), François Vaillancourt and Marc Vachon (Montréal), Claire Turenne-Sjolander (Ottawa), Tom McIntosh (Queen's), Matthew James (UBC), Kathleen Day and Quentin Grafton (Ottawa), Brian Tanguay (Wilfred Laurier), Howard Leeson (Regina), Frank Graves (EKOS Research), and Melissa Kruger (Queen's).
Foreword v
Contributors vii
I Overview
1 How Canadians Connect: State, Economy, Citizenship and Society
3(34)
Harvey Lazar
Tom McIntosh
II The Role of the State
2 The Changing Canadian State
37(24)
Reg Whitaker
3 Two Types of Pluralism in Canada
61(26)
Avigail Eisenberg
III The Economic Context
4 Canada's National Economy: There's More to It Than You Thought
87(14)
John F. Helliwell
5 Interprovincial Mobility in Canada, 1961-1996: Importance and Destination
101(22)
Marc Vachon
Francois Vaillancourt
6 How Canadians (Dis)connect: Foreign Economic Policy in an Era of Globalization
123(24)
Claire Turenne Sjolander
IV The Societal Context
7 Organized Labour in a Federal Society: Solidarity, Coalition Building and Canadian Unions
147(32)
Tom McIntosh
8 Interprovincial Student Mobility in Canada
179(38)
Kathleen M. Day
R. Quentin Grafton
9 Canada's Political Parties in the 1990s: The Fraying of the Ties that Bind
217(30)
A. Brian Tanguay
V Identity, Citizenship and Culture
10 Redress Politics and Canadian Citizenship
247(36)
Matt James
11 English and French and Generation X: The Professional Values of Canadian Journalists
283(24)
David Pritchard
Florian Sauvageau
12 Identity and National Attachments in Contemporary Canada
307(50)
Frank L. Graves
Tim Dugas
Patrick Beauchamp
VI Chronology
13 Chronology of Events 1997-98
357
Melissa Kluger
Harvey Lazar is fellow, Institute of Intergovernmental Relations, Queen's University, and senior research associate, Centre for Global Studies, University of Victoria.