Canadian citizenship has long been characterized in opposition to that of our southern neighbour as a ?mosaic? instead of a ?melting pot.? Acceptance of minority ethnic, racial, religious, cultural, and linguistic groups has largely been seen as key to our sense of what it means to be Canadian. Such multiplicity, however, has given rise to ongoing debates over equality, diversity, identity, and unity.
This groundbreaking work interrogates and expands the accepted modes of thinking through Canadian citizenship. Drawing on feminist and postcolonial theorists, Gerald Kernerman...
Canadian citizenship has long been characterized in opposition to that of our southern neighbour as a ?mosaic? instead of a ?melting pot.? Acceptan...
What place do first ministers, along with the cabinets they select, have in democratic life in Canada? Has cabinet really become just a focus group for the Prime Minister? Do political staff and central agency bureaucrats enhance or diminish democracy? Do private members have any say in the cabinet process?
In an accessible, thorough, and balanced fashion, this volume of the Canadian Democratic Audit examines the concentration of power in cabinet and the prime minister's office. Taking the view that to explain our Westminster-style government as a benign dictatorship is an...
What place do first ministers, along with the cabinets they select, have in democratic life in Canada? Has cabinet really become just a focus group...