The State in Transition

Challenges for Canadian Federalism

Edited by Michael Behiels, François Rocher
Contributions by Robert Talbot, Thomas O. Hueglin, Jeremy A. Clarke, Daniel Bourgeois, Patrick Fafard, François Rocher, Andrew Bourns, Peter Graefe, Raffaele Iacovino, Geneviève Nootens, Geoffrey Hale, France Morrissette, and Brooke Jeffrey
Categories: Political Science
Publisher: Les Presses de l'Université d'Ottawa/University of Ottawa Press
Paperback : 9780776638737, 413 pages, August 2022
Ebook (PDF) : 9780776638744, 413 pages, August 2022
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780776638751, 413 pages, August 2022

Description

Canadian federalism, as a particular form of political organization for a complex society—with multiple economic, political, geographic, cultural, and national divides—faces important challenges. The political realignment that brought the Conservative Party to power in the last quinquennium has set in motion a significant transformation of the Canadian state and its federal system of governance.
The contributors in this collection focus on three recurrent themes: the issues arising from the management of ethno-cultural diversity; the existence of internal nations in Canada (the First Nations and the Quebec nation in Quebec), the presence of linguistic minorities (French and English), and the questions of identity linked to citizenship in a federal context that allows for the presence of multiple loyalties; and the specific challenges raised by globalization and the extension of economic integration, particularly between the United States and Canada.
This collection of studies on the role of the state reveals that our understanding of the evolution of the Canadian state, and of the ensuing impact on federalism and federal-provincial relations, is not as complete as it should be.