05108nam 2200757 450 991042515640332120221206101323.03-0352-9916-13-0352-6503-8(CKB)2670000000595024(EBL)1952870(SSID)ssj0001470341(PQKBManifestationID)11797279(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001470341(PQKBWorkID)11411559(PQKB)10225591(MiAaPQ)EBC1952870(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/38855(PPN)229195075(EXLCZ)99267000000059502420150304h20142014 uy 0engur|n#||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierInterpreting Quebec's exile within the federation selected political essays /Guy Laforest ; with the collaboration of Oscar Mejia MesaÉditions scientifiques internationales.BernPeter Lang International Academic Publishing Group2015Brussels, [Belgium] :P.I.E. Peter Lang,2014.©20141 online resource (206 pages) digital file(s)Diversitas ;Volume 20Print version (paperback): 9782875742292 2875742299 Includes bibliographical references .Machine generated contents note:ch. 1The 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. 2The Contemporary Meaning and Utility of Federalism --I.The Meaning and Utility of Federalism --II.Federalism's Challenges and Problems --Conclusion --ch. 3Making Sense of Canada as a Federal System: The Relevance of Historical Legacies --I.Historical Legacies: Their Nature, Role, Interrelations, and Contemporary Significance --Conclusion --ch. 4The Historical and Legal Origins of Asymmetrical Federalism in Canada's Founding Debates: A Brief Interpretive Note --Conclusion --ch. 5What Canadian Federalism Means in Quebec --I.Interpretive Context --II.Contemporary Trends and Scholarship: Critical Reflections --Conclusion --ch. 6Lord 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. 7Some Reflections on the Bouchard-Taylor Commission --ch. 8More Distress than Enchantment: The Constitutional Negotiations of November 1981 --I.Causes --II.Assessing the Behaviour of Participants --III.Consequences --Conclusion --ch. 9The 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. 10Trust and Mistrust between Harper and Quebec --I.Some Reflections on Trust and its Derivatives --II.Harper and Quebec --Conclusion.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 fully integrated, politically and constitutionally, nor are they leaving the federation, for now and for the foreseeable future. They are in between these two predicaments. Laforest provides insights into the current workings of the Canadian federation, and some of its key figures of the past fifty years, suchDiversitas ;Volume 20.Political scienceEarly works to 1800Québec (Province)Social conditionsHistory.fastEssaysExileFederalismFederationInterpretingLaforestMinorityPoliticalPolitical scienceQuebecQuebec provinceQuebec’sSelectedPolitical science320.1Laforest Guy1955-,222816Mesa Oscar MejiaMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQUkMaJRUBOOK9910425156403321Interpreting Quebec's exile within the federation2022031UNINA