This year's volume of Canada Among Nations addresses the following key issues: Canada's role in international peacekeeping The aftermath of the United Nations Conference on the Environment and Sustainable Development Canada and the Pacific International migration and refugees International security Canada and the Arctic The consequences of the defeat of the Charlottetown Accord for Canada's foreign and international economic relations The future of NAFTA with a new Democratic president in the White House Contributors include: Andrew Cohen on international security and NATO Michael Hart on trade policy Albert Legault on peacekeeping and the United Nations Geoffrey Pearson and Nancy Gordon on the demise of the advisory councils David Runnalls on the Rio Conference Clyde Sanger on environment and development Michael Shenstone on immigration and refugee policy
The 1994 edition of Canada Among Nations concludes with the issue of peace. As the cold-war era recedes into memory, the new world order turns out to be a time of great uncertainty.
... to create significant additional and sustained parliamentary and public capacity for engaging in policy analysis that is taken seriously in actual decision - making ( Draimin and Schmitz , 1997 ) . Three main 246 Schmitz and Lee.
6 Bill Dymond and Michael Hart , " The Potemkin Village of Canadian Foreign Policy , " Policy Options , 25 , 1 ( December - January 2004 ) , 40 . 7 Lloyd Axworthy , Navigating a New World : Canada's Global Future ( Toronto : Knopf ...
Contributors to this volume critique Canada's performance on the world stage, offering advice on initiatives Canada can take in its own and in the common interest.
Canada Among Nations, 1989: The Challenge of Change
Carleton University Press Inc. 1991 ISBN 0-88629-144-5 ( paperback ) ISBN 0-88629-145-3 ( casebound ) Printed and bound in Canada Carleton Public Policy Series # 7 Canadian Cataloguing in Publication Data The National Library of Canada ...
Why Mexico matters to Canada now more than ever and how we can leverage our strategic relationship.
The country is not a lightweight yet, but certainly its position as a power is shrinking. What does that mean for the country's foreign policy and its various players? What room is left, and for whom?
45 Hector MacKenzie, “The ABCs of Canada's International Economic Relations, 1945–1951. ... See Susan Howson and Donald Moggridge, Editors, The Wartime Diaries of Lionel Robbins and James Meade, 1943–1945 (New York: St. Martin's Press, ...
1985. October 19 . 1986. January 4 . Financial Times of London . 1985a . September 23 . 1985b . October 16 . 1985c . December 5 . 1985d . December 16 . 1986. January 2 . Fortune . 1985. October 28 . General Agreement on Tariffs and ...