Chapter 2 The United States and Canada: In Search of a Partnership
Charles F. Doran
Chapter 3 Where is the Relationship Going? The View from Canada
Richard Nimijean
Chapter 4 “America First” and U.S. – Canadian Relations
Rodger A. Payne
Principal Domains of the Relationship
Chapter 5 Canada-United States Security Cooperation: Interests, Institutions, Identity and Ideas
Todd Hataley and Christian Leuprecht
Chapter 6 Fairweather Friends? Canada-United States Environmental Relations in the Days of Trump and the Era of Climate Change
Peter Stoett
Chapter 7 Finding Commonalities Amidst Increasing Differences in Canadian and U.S. Immigration Policies
Tamara M. Woroby
Chapter 8 Canada’s Global Trade Options – Is there a Plan B?
Laura Dawson
Chapter 9 Cross-border Energy Infrastructure: The Politics of Intermesticity
Geoffrey Hale
Chapter 10 Upsetting the Apple Cart? Implications of the NAFTA renegotiations
for Canada-US Relations
Laura Macdonald
Emerging Issues in the Relationship
Chapter 11 Drug Policy and Canada-US Relations: The Evidence and its (Ir)relevance
Jean Daudelin and Philip Jones
Chapter 12 Whither Canadian Climate Policy in the Trump Era?
Brendan Boyd & Barry Rabe
Chapter 13 Corruption in North America: Canada and the United States
Robert I. Rotberg
Chapter 14 Conclusion
Christopher Sands and David Carment
David Carment is Professor of International Affairs at Carleton University, Canada, and Editor of Canadian Foreign Policy Journal. He is Series Editor of Palgrave Macmillan’s Canada and International Affairs.
Christopher Sands is Senior Research Professor and Director of the Center for Canadian Studies at Johns Hopkins University’s Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, DC, USA.
This book, the 32nd volume in the Canada Among Nations series, looks to the wide array of foreign policy challenges, choices and priorities that Canada confronts in relations with the US where the line between international and domestic affairs is increasingly blurred. In the context of the Canada-US relationship, this blurring is manifest as a cooperative effort by officials to manage aspects of the relationship in which bilateral institutional cooperation goes on largely unnoticed. Chapters in this volume focus on longstanding issues reflecting some degree of Canada-US coordination, if not integration, such as trade, the environment and energy. Other chapters focus on emerging issues such as drug policies, energy, corruption and immigration within the context of these institutional arrangements.
David Carment is Professor of International Affairs at Carleton University, Canada, and Editor of Canadian Foreign Policy Journal. He is Series Editor of Palgrave Macmillan’s Canada and International Affairs.
Christopher Sands is Senior Research Professor and Director of the Center for Canadian Studies at Johns Hopkins University’s Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, DC, USA.