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Heterogeneity in political decision-making : the nature, sources, extent, dynamics, and consequences of interpersonal differences in coefficient strengthFournier, Patrick 11 1900 (has links)
There is mounting evidence that the public's political decisional processes are heterogeneous
(Rivers, 1988; Sniderman, Brody & Tetlock, 1991; and Johnston, Blais, Gidengil & Nevitte, 1996).
All citizens do not reason the same way about politics: they rely on different considerations, or they
give different weights to similar considerations. However, our understanding of this phenomenon
remains sketchy, in many regards. I address the conceptual and empirical ambiguity by exploring
the nature, the sources, the extent, the consequences, and the campaign dynamics of interpersonal
heterogeneity in political decision-making. The analysis relies on Canadian and American public
opinion survey data.
The evidence reveals that heterogeneity is a very important phenomenon. Relationships
between dependent and explanatory variables are rarely stable and consistent across the entire
population. Most political decisions (especially the more common ones) and most independent
variables exhibit interpersonal diversity in coefficient strength. Hypothesis-testing and explanationbuilding
can be led astray if researchers limit their analyses to the whole citizenry. Normatively,
heterogeneity is responsible for individual and aggregate deviations from enlightened preferences.
Heterogeneity, however, is a very complex phenomenon. One can not deal with it in any
simple way. A researcher can not simply capture it, take it into account, and move on to other
concerns. Heterogeneity permeates through our models of political behaviour in significant,
pervasive and perplexing ways.
This research raises concerns about the complexity of political behaviour and our ability to
understand citizens, campaigns, elections, and democracy. The world is not a simple,
straightforward and easily comprehensible subject. It is much more intricate and difficult to grasp
than we currently believe. In order to understand reality, our approaches, theories, and models need
to be as complex and multidimensional as reality. Striving for oversimplification can only lead to
misconceptions and fallacies.
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112 |
Shifting boundaries : aboriginal identity, pluralist theory, and the politics of self-government in CanadaSchouls, Timothy A. 05 1900 (has links)
While Canada is often called a pluralist state, there are no sustained studies by political
scientists in which aboriginal self-government is discussed specifically in terms of the
analytical tradition of pluralist thought. Aboriginal self-government is usually discussed as an
issue of cultural preservation or national self-determination. Aboriginal identity is framed in
terms of cultural and national traits that are unique to an aboriginal community and selfgovernment
is taken to represent the aboriginal communal desire to protect and preserve those
traits. Is such an understanding of what motivates aboriginal self-government accurate, or
does it yield an incomplete understanding of the complex phenomenon that aboriginal selfgovernment
in Canada represents?
The political tradition of pluralism allows for analysis of aboriginal self-government
that addresses questions left unattended by the cultural and nationalist frameworks. Pluralism
is often viewed as a public arrangement in which distinct groups are given room to live side by
side, characterized by mutual recognition and affirmation. At the same time, there are
different faces of pluralist theory and each addresses questions about the recognition and
affirmation of aboriginal self-government in different ways. Those three contemporary faces
can be distinguished by the labels communitarian, individualist, and relational.
The major hypothesis advanced is that aboriginal self-government is better understood
if an "identification" perspective on aboriginal identity is adopted as opposed to a "cultural" or
"national" one and if that perspective is linked to a relational theory of pluralism as opposed to
a communitarian or individualist one. The identification approach examines aboriginal identity
not in terms of cultural and political traits, but in terms of identification with, and political
commitment to, an aboriginal community. Relational pluralism in turn, examines the challenge
of aboriginal self-government in terms of power differences within aboriginal communities and
between aboriginal and Canadian governments.
Applying these approaches to aboriginal politics in Canada confirms their suitability.
Contrary to what previous scholarship has assumed, aboriginal self-government should not be
seen primarily as a tool to preserve cultural and national differences as goods in and of
themselves. The politics of aboriginal self-government should be seen as involving demands
to equalize current imbalances in power so that aboriginal communities and the individuals
within them can construct aboriginal identities according to their own design.
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113 |
Judicial disagreement on the Supreme Court of CanadaAndrokovich-Farries, Bonnie, University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Arts and Science January 2004 (has links)
This paper will attempt to explore the history and function of judical disagreement behaviour using information from both the Canadian Supreme Court and the US Supreme Court. The evolution of national high court decision making, highlights the changing role of courts within the political and public spheres, as well as the increasing authority courts have over policy. This changing role reinforces the need to study the role of courts on law. I will use minority opinions from the Laskin and Dickson courts to study what disagreement reveals about the decision making process. Judicial disagreement has largely been summed up into two deficient stereotypes: the dissent as "serious" disagreement and the separate concurrence as inferior disagreement to the dissent. I will dispel this fallacy by introducing the five categories created to describe a new way of thinking about judicial disagreement and to shatter the old stereotypes. / vii, 149 leaves ; 29 cm.
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114 |
Le pouvoir, les paysans et la voirie au Bas-Canada à la fin du XVIIIe siècle /Robichaud, Léon, 1962- January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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115 |
The capacity of Canadian Indians for local government on their reservesNicholls, John England Oscar January 1966 (has links)
In studying the capacity of Canadian Indians for local government on their reserves two objects are sought. First we wish to show the extent to which Indians are involved in directing the affairs of their communities. Second, we hope to discover where Indians, in comparison with other Canadians, are incapacitated by virtue of their special legal, social and economic status.
Research for this study was gleaned from files, publications and records of interviews in the offices of the Indian Affairs Branch of the federal government, provincial departments of municipal affairs and offices of municipal associations in Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, Edmonton and Vancouver.
We begin our study by investigating the reality of local government for non-Indians. Then we look at the capacity of Indians for similar forms of local authority on their reserves. Capacity is examined in terms of legal competence, existing economic and administrative ability to carry out local functions and potential for future development of local government.
Non-Indian local government is developed under a complex set of provincial legal and economic controls. Non-Indian municipalities appear to be mainly oriented towards the provision of local services. In contrast Indian local government is developed under the federal legislation of the Indian Act. A flexible interpretation of the Act by federal officials permits the development of local government forms to suit the needs of particular reserves. On the other hand controls exercised by federal officials, along with deficiencies in local economic resources and administrative skills, tend to retard the growth of local government.
A possible way for the reduction of differences between Indian and non-Indian capacities would involve the integration of bands and municipalities within a common framework of local government. There is little evidence at present of such integration if measured in terms of transactions between bands and municipalities, common opportunities under federal and provincial programs of grants and joint membership in regional governments and local government associations.
A set of alternative courses is considered for Indian communities to follow in the future. We conclude that evolution of local government under the Indian Act seems the most appropriate means by which Indian capacities can be used both to improve local services and to develop non-Indian political skills among Indians. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate
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116 |
Shifting boundaries : aboriginal identity, pluralist theory, and the politics of self-government in CanadaSchouls, Timothy A. 05 1900 (has links)
While Canada is often called a pluralist state, there are no sustained studies by political
scientists in which aboriginal self-government is discussed specifically in terms of the
analytical tradition of pluralist thought. Aboriginal self-government is usually discussed as an
issue of cultural preservation or national self-determination. Aboriginal identity is framed in
terms of cultural and national traits that are unique to an aboriginal community and selfgovernment
is taken to represent the aboriginal communal desire to protect and preserve those
traits. Is such an understanding of what motivates aboriginal self-government accurate, or
does it yield an incomplete understanding of the complex phenomenon that aboriginal selfgovernment
in Canada represents?
The political tradition of pluralism allows for analysis of aboriginal self-government
that addresses questions left unattended by the cultural and nationalist frameworks. Pluralism
is often viewed as a public arrangement in which distinct groups are given room to live side by
side, characterized by mutual recognition and affirmation. At the same time, there are
different faces of pluralist theory and each addresses questions about the recognition and
affirmation of aboriginal self-government in different ways. Those three contemporary faces
can be distinguished by the labels communitarian, individualist, and relational.
The major hypothesis advanced is that aboriginal self-government is better understood
if an "identification" perspective on aboriginal identity is adopted as opposed to a "cultural" or
"national" one and if that perspective is linked to a relational theory of pluralism as opposed to
a communitarian or individualist one. The identification approach examines aboriginal identity
not in terms of cultural and political traits, but in terms of identification with, and political
commitment to, an aboriginal community. Relational pluralism in turn, examines the challenge
of aboriginal self-government in terms of power differences within aboriginal communities and
between aboriginal and Canadian governments.
Applying these approaches to aboriginal politics in Canada confirms their suitability.
Contrary to what previous scholarship has assumed, aboriginal self-government should not be
seen primarily as a tool to preserve cultural and national differences as goods in and of
themselves. The politics of aboriginal self-government should be seen as involving demands
to equalize current imbalances in power so that aboriginal communities and the individuals
within them can construct aboriginal identities according to their own design. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate
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117 |
Competing visions of equality and identity : Quebec’s Bill 101 and federal language policyPatel, Nazeer 11 1900 (has links)
Language has become a central feature of the debate surrounding Canadian
identity. The Canadian project is an example of a state struggling to find a means of
accommodating linguistic difference. This struggle is epitomized by the language
legislation in Quebec as well as by federal bilingualism. Language legislation is
ultimately aimed at promoting and protecting identity.
An examination of language legislation as promoted by Quebec and the federal
government reveals a different orientation toward the concept of equality. Language
policy thus presents both a vision of community and a political argument. Federal
language policy promotes a vision of Canada in which English and French are juridically
equal. Politically, this vision of community denies Quebec is distinct.
Quebec's language policy, on the other hand, asserts the importance of protecting
Quebecois culture against the majoritarian impulses of a larger Canadian identity. As a
result, Quebec's language legislation incorporates Quebec's different position in Canada
into a definition of equality. Recognition that Quebec has a right to protect its language
is tantamount to an acknowledgement that Quebec is a distinct society in Canada. The
language debate thus embodies competing visions of equality that relate to a specific
identity.
The national unity issue plaguing Canada cannot be resolved through a
commitment to equality as similar treatment. The problem of language planning, in
Canada, revolves around finding a way to acknowledge and promote the local aspirations
of the Quebecois, without creating an inequitable language environment for the English
linguistic minority in Quebec. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate
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118 |
Heterogeneity in political decision-making : the nature, sources, extent, dynamics, and consequences of interpersonal differences in coefficient strengthFournier, Patrick 11 1900 (has links)
There is mounting evidence that the public's political decisional processes are heterogeneous
(Rivers, 1988; Sniderman, Brody & Tetlock, 1991; and Johnston, Blais, Gidengil & Nevitte, 1996).
All citizens do not reason the same way about politics: they rely on different considerations, or they
give different weights to similar considerations. However, our understanding of this phenomenon
remains sketchy, in many regards. I address the conceptual and empirical ambiguity by exploring
the nature, the sources, the extent, the consequences, and the campaign dynamics of interpersonal
heterogeneity in political decision-making. The analysis relies on Canadian and American public
opinion survey data.
The evidence reveals that heterogeneity is a very important phenomenon. Relationships
between dependent and explanatory variables are rarely stable and consistent across the entire
population. Most political decisions (especially the more common ones) and most independent
variables exhibit interpersonal diversity in coefficient strength. Hypothesis-testing and explanationbuilding
can be led astray if researchers limit their analyses to the whole citizenry. Normatively,
heterogeneity is responsible for individual and aggregate deviations from enlightened preferences.
Heterogeneity, however, is a very complex phenomenon. One can not deal with it in any
simple way. A researcher can not simply capture it, take it into account, and move on to other
concerns. Heterogeneity permeates through our models of political behaviour in significant,
pervasive and perplexing ways.
This research raises concerns about the complexity of political behaviour and our ability to
understand citizens, campaigns, elections, and democracy. The world is not a simple,
straightforward and easily comprehensible subject. It is much more intricate and difficult to grasp
than we currently believe. In order to understand reality, our approaches, theories, and models need
to be as complex and multidimensional as reality. Striving for oversimplification can only lead to
misconceptions and fallacies. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate
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119 |
Canadian-Indonesian relations 1945-63 : international relations and public diplomacyWebster, David 05 1900 (has links)
Canadian foreign policy towards Indonesia during the governments of Louis St. Laurent
(1948-57) and John Diefenbaker (1957-63) was conditioned by Canada's place in the North
Atlantic alliance, seen as more central to national interests. The most direct Canada-Indonesia
connections were forged by non-government "public diplomats." This thesis utilizes the theory of
"mental maps" as a way of understanding how diplomats imagined the world. Policymakers1
mental maps gave prominence to Europe and the North Atlantic. Southeast Asia appeared only as
a periphery needing to be held for larger "free world" goals. Ottawa viewed Indonesia through the
prism of its alliances and multilateral associations. Canadian diplomacy towards Indonesia was
often designed to preserve the unity of the North Atlantic alliance.
During the Indonesian national revolution, Canadian representatives on the Security Council
acted to help their Netherlands allies. They found a compromise solution that helped to prevent
splits within the North Atlantic alliance and the Commonwealth. Policymakers were working out
a diplomatic self-image: Canada as mediating middle power. This was a process of myth making
in which actions taken for alliance reasons were remembered as part of a global peacemaking
mission. However, Ottawa avoided involvement in the second Indonesian-Dutch decolonization
dispute over West New Guinea (Papua). Development aid also became part of Canada's
diplomatic self-perception. Canada sent aid through the Colombo plan, intended to restore global
trade and fight the cold war with non-military weapons. Canadian aid to Indonesia was negligible,
primarily wheat.
While bilateral relations were limited, non-state actors operating within North America-wide
networks forged more important connections. Canadian advisers to Indonesia's National Planning
Bureau mapped out a development path based on Western models. McGill University's Institute
of Islamic Studies promoted the "modernization" of Islam. Indonesia under Sukarno (1945-65)
tried to avoid dependence on aid, but welcomed investment by oil companies such as Asamera
and bought de Havilland aircraft from Canada. The seeds for the economic policies of Suharto's
New Order (1965-98) were sown during this period by Indonesians based in the Planning Bureau
and at McGill. Public diplomacy had a more enduring effect than government policy. / Arts, Faculty of / History, Department of / Graduate
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Modernizing colonialism : an examination of the political agenda of the First Nations Governance Act (2002)Dupuis-Rossi, Riel. January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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