The Call of the World

A Political Memoir

By Bill Graham
Categories: Political Science, Canadian Political Science, Literature & Language Studies, Auto/biography & Memoir, International Relations, History, Law & Legal Studies, International Law
Series: The C.D. Howe Series in Canadian Political History
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774890007, 512 pages, April 2016
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774890014, 512 pages, April 2016
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774890021, 512 pages, April 2016
Ebook (MobiPocket) : 9780774890038, 512 pages, April 2016
Paperback : 9780774890045, 512 pages, September 2018

Table of contents

Part 1: Foreign Education

1 Where I Come From

2 Out and About

3 Trading Places

4 Never Twice without a Third

Part 2: Foreign Matters

5 House Duty

6 Parliamentary Diplomacy

7 Democratic Deficit

8 Human Security

9 All Geopolitics Is Local

10 Marching as to War

Part 3: Foreign Affairs

11 Friends in High Places

12 The Unwilling

13 Picking Up the Pieces

Part 4: Foreign Legions

14 Changing of the Guard

15 The 3D War

16 Home Fires

Aftermath

In this insightful and wryly humorous memoir, Bill Graham steers his readers through an astonishing array of domestic and global events as he recalls his life as international lawyer and prominent Canadian politician.

Description

Bill Graham – Canada’s minister of foreign affairs and minister of defence during the tumultuous years following 9/11 – takes us on a personal journey from his Vancouver childhood to important behind-the-scenes moments in recent global history. With candour and wit, he recounts meetings with world leaders, contextualizes important geopolitical relationships, and offers acute observations on backstage politics. He explains Canada’s decision not to participate in the 2003 invasion of Iraq and makes a passionate case for why international law offers the best hope for a safer, more prosperous, and just world.

Reviews

Bill Graham was foreign minister in 2003 when Canada infuriated George W. Bush by refusing to join his “coalition of the willing” and invade lraq. In The Call of the World Graham reveals the intense pressure that Bush put on Jean Chrétien, the prime minister, who turned down the president’s request to come to Ottawa and make his case in person. Canadians, who often feel bullied by their powerful neighbour, are entranced.

- “What the World is Reading”

I was in the Parliamentary Press Gallery for The Globe and Mail during the whole of Graham’s elected career and wrote about him from time to time. But I have to admit that I came away from his book with a greater appreciation of his gravitas and accomplishments than I reflected in my stories at the time – indeed the whole gallery underestimated him. If we had paid more attention to him and done our homework, the Canadian public would have been better informed.

- Hugh Winsor

Graham’s “political memoir” The Call of the World is not only one of the best autobiographies ever produced by a Canadian politician, it is a deeply informed and insightful commentary on Canada’s international relations, both in policy and practice, as well as a passionate positive appeal for active citizenship from the local to the global.

- Gerald Schmitz

With the Liberal party back in government after an eleven-year run by Stephen Harper’s Conservatives, we are seeing many figures who served Liberal governments throughout the 1990s and early 2000s returning in advisory capacities. One of those is Bill Graham, who was variably Foreign Affairs Minister, Minister of Defence and interim leader of the Liberal Party. While he might be unfamiliar to a new generation of voters, his autobiography The Call of the World, gives insight into Graham the politician and the inner workings of the Liberal governments under former prime ministers Paul Martin and Jean Chretien.

- Patrick Gossage

One of the more revealing memoirs by a Canadian politician to come along.

- Lawrence Martin

[A]mong the most profound writing of any postwar Canadian politician … To read The Call Of The World is to sense a nagging conscience and sleepless nights … Graham is sincere and forthright … [He] deserves credit for plain honesty in a political memoir that breaks the mold of self-serving platitudes.

- Holly Doan

Well written, and leavened with ample doses of humor and insight, The Call of the World is above all a frank and compelling account of one policymaker’s efforts to reconcile our highest legal and human rights ideals with the real world. However imperfect, it’s a record worth celebrating.

- Greg Donaghy, Historical Section, Global Affairs Canada

The Call of the World includes a good deal of interesting information about the nuts and bolts of electoral politics in this country and how they are changing.

- George Fetherling

Bill Graham’s political memoir, The Call of the World, provides a window seat to some of the most important domestic and foreign events of the past quarter century in a candid and colourful way.

- Kevin Brushett, Royal Military College of Canada

It is rare when former politicians fail to use every word, sentence, and chapter of their memoirs to justify their decisions, to explain how they were either misunderstood or unheeded when things went wrong, and how their superior sense and profound understanding of what was necessary prevailed when things went right. It is precisely this rarity that makes The Call of the World: A Political Memoir so readable and unique.

- Hugh Segal, Distinguished Fellow, Munk School of Global Affairs; Master, Massey College, University of Toronto