Interpreting Quebec's exile within the federation : : selected political essays / / Guy Laforest ; with the collaboration of Oscar Mejia Mesa.

This book combines the approaches of political theory and of intellectual history to provide a lucid account of Québec's contemporary situation within the Canadian federation. Guy Laforest considers that the province of Québec, and its inhabitants, are exiled within Canada. They are not full...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Diversitas ; Volume 20
VerfasserIn:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Brussels, [Belgium] : : P.I.E. Peter Lang,, 2014.
©2014
Year of Publication:2015
2014
Edition:Éditions scientifiques internationales.
Language:English
Series:Diversitas ; Volume 20.
Physical Description:1 online resource (206 pages) :; digital file(s).
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Table of Contents:
  • Machine generated contents note: ch. 1 The Internal Exile of Quebecers in the Canada of the Charter
  • I. Pierre Trudeau, the Exile of Quebecers, and the Charter
  • II. To End the Exile
  • Conclusion
  • ch. 2 The Contemporary Meaning and Utility of Federalism
  • I. The Meaning and Utility of Federalism
  • II. Federalism's Challenges and Problems
  • Conclusion
  • ch. 3 Making Sense of Canada as a Federal System: The Relevance of Historical Legacies
  • I. Historical Legacies: Their Nature, Role, Interrelations, and Contemporary Significance
  • Conclusion
  • ch. 4 The Historical and Legal Origins of Asymmetrical Federalism in Canada's Founding Debates: A Brief Interpretive Note
  • Conclusion
  • ch. 5 What Canadian Federalism Means in Quebec
  • I. Interpretive Context
  • II. Contemporary Trends and Scholarship: Critical Reflections
  • Conclusion
  • ch. 6 Lord Durham, French Canada, and Quebec: Remembering the Past, Debating the Future
  • I. Coming to Terms with Lord Durham's Report in French Canada and Quebec
  • II. Janet Ajzenstat's Introduction: Debating Lord Durham's Influence on Canada and Assessing Him as a Human Being and as a Thinker
  • III. A Critical Hermeneutics for the Present and for the Future
  • Conclusion
  • ch. 7 Some Reflections on the Bouchard-Taylor Commission
  • ch. 8 More Distress than Enchantment: The Constitutional Negotiations of November 1981
  • I. Causes
  • II. Assessing the Behaviour of Participants
  • III. Consequences
  • Conclusion
  • ch. 9 The Canadian State and the Political Freedom of Quebec: The Ideas of James Tully and Michel Seymour
  • I. Canada's Political-Constitutional Identity and Quebec's Situation
  • II. The Philosophical Approaches of James Tully and Michel Seymour
  • III. From a Straightjacket to a Reworking of Democratic Constitutionalism with Universal Scope
  • IV. Michel Seymour's Criticism
  • V. Overall Consideration of the Theses in Light of Seymour's Objections
  • Conclusion
  • ch. 10 Trust and Mistrust between Harper and Quebec
  • I. Some Reflections on Trust and its Derivatives
  • II. Harper and Quebec
  • Conclusion.