Canada's Foreign Security Policy: Canada's Foreign and Security Policy
Soft and Hard Strategies of a Middle Power
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Product details:
- Edition number and title :Canada's Foreign and Security Policy
- Publisher OUP Canada
- Date of Publication 29 October 2009
- ISBN 9780195431698
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages328 pages
- Size 230x154x17 mm
- Weight 439 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 4 tables 0
Categories
Long description:
A compilation of brand-new research and writing from leading Canadian and European experts on Canadian foreign policy, Canada's Foreign and Security Policy: Soft and Hard Strategies of a Middle Power re-examines Canada's political place and international influence in the contemporary world. As half of the contributors are non-Canadians, this 'outside-in' character of the book offers a unique perspective on internal versus external role perception, recognizing the disparity between Canada's national self-image and interpretations from outside the country's boundaries.
Organized into three parts, the book begins with a conceptual analysis of Canada's label and position as a middle power, then moves on to assess the soft and hard dimensions of Canada's foreign and security policy within this framework. Individual chapters are policy-relevant and cover a range of topics of interest to Canadian foreign policy students and scholars alike, including human security, development policy, environmental and energy policies, the role of the Canadian forces, terrorism, NATO involvement, and Arctic sovereignty. Within these chapters, key debates meet new scholarship as authors examine the interrelationships within and among policy areas, and also call into question the 'sedimented truths' of Canadian foreign and security policy.
Table of Contents:
Foreword
Acknowledgements
List of Contributors
Introduction
Part 1: Re-Examining Middlepowerhood in Canada's Foreign and Security Policy
Whither the Middle Power Identity? Transformations in the Canadian Foreign and Security Milieus
'Middlepowerhood' and 'Middlepowermanship' in Canadian Foreign Policy
Canada as a Middle, Model, or Civilian Power: What's in a Name?
Part 2: Re-Examining Canada's Soft Power
How 'Soft' Is Canada's Soft Power in the Field of Human Security?
The Transformation of Canada's Development Policy through the Security-Development Approach
The Diplomacy of a Middle Power: Innovation and Its Limits
Canadian Middle Power Identity, Environmental Biopolitics, and Human Insecurity
Superpower, Middle Power, or Satellite? Canadian Energy and Environmental Policy
Part 3: Re-Examining Canada's Hard Power
The Revolution in Military Affairs and the Dilemma of the Canadian Armed Forces
A Security Community-'If You Can Keep It': Societal Security, Demography, and the North American Zone of Peace
Canada's Response to Terrorism: Human Security at Home?
Canada and the Atlantic Alliance in the post-Cold War Era: More NATO than NATO?
Canada's Arctic Policy: Transcending the Middle-Power Model?
Conclusion
Index