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The traditions continue : leadership choices at Maritime Liberal and Conservative Party conventionsStewart, David Kenney January 1990 (has links)
That leaders are important in Canadian party politics is almost axiomatic: they are the prime electoral resource, the ultimate policy authority and the focus of media attention. Yet little is known of what divides provincial parties when they choose a new master. The politics of provincial leadership conventions lie in uncharted waters.
This thesis focuses on provincial parties, exploring support patterns at Maritime leadership conventions. The study draws primarily on data provided by unpublished surveys of delegates to Liberal and Progressive Conservative leadership conventions in the three Maritime provinces. These nine conventions took place between 1971 and 1986 and the delegate survey responses report the behaviour and attitudes of over 3100 party activists. The analysis develops provincial, partisan and secular comparisons. A framework for analysing delegate support patterns is derived from the literature on national conventions and Maritime politics. Application of this framework to the nine conventions reveals a recurring theme.
Candidate support is best understood in a 'friends and neighbours' framework. Friends and neighbours refers first, to a non-factional geographic pattern of support. Simply put, delegates tend to support the local candidate, a neighbour. The second element of friends and neighbours support relates to ethno-religious ties. Candidates receive disproportionate support from delegates who are 'friends' in terms of shared religious or ethnic background.
Friends and neighbours divisions were more important than attitude, age, gender or differences in social status: they were present throughout the period in each province and both parties. The importance of place and religion/ethnicity provide empirical evidence of Maritime traditionalism. The support patterns would be well understood by 19th century politicians and show no sign of dissipating. Attempts to link these patterns to age or level of education were unsuccessful. Virtually all delegates were influenced by the ties of 'friendship' or 'neighbourhood'. The major exceptions were ex officio delegates. These party professionals acting in a brokerage role were relatively immune from the friends and neighbours pull. By mitigating such divisions, ex officio delegates made substantial contributions to party unity.
This thesis reveals a coherent and consistent pattern of intra party divisions in the region. It confirms the strength of traditionalism in the Maritimes and highlights an important manifestation of this traditionalism: ethno religious solidarity undercut by localism and mitigated by brokerage politics. Such findings are in sharp contrast to assertions that Maritime politics is changing. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate
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Electoral manipulation and the influence of polling on politicians : a study of political organization in the Liberal Party of Canada up to the 1984 election campaignDrews, Ronald C. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Factors and variations in Liberal and Radical opinion on foreign policy, 1885-1899Gross, Reuben H. January 1950 (has links)
No description available.
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The transition from Whiggism to LiberalismSouthgate, Donald January 1949 (has links)
No description available.
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The Liberal Party and South Africa, 1895-1902Butler, Jeffrey January 1963 (has links)
No description available.
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Kunskap, ordning och krav : Liberalism och konservatism i Folkpartiets skolpolitikHöglund, Alexander January 2006 (has links)
<p>This paper examines the ideological content of the compulsory school policy of the Swedish Liberal Party. The aim of the study is to investigate whether the Liberal Party does really represent a liberal policy for the compulsory school, or if it is more accurately described as conservative. The analysis is carried through by two separate critical examinations of the Liberal Party motion on school politics to the parliament and the Conservative Party motion on school politics to the parliament respectively. A comparison is then made between the ideological contents of the two documents. The specific party policies are linked to universal definitions of liberalism and conservatism with the help of an analytical tool consistent of a series of educational philosophies. Difference is made between ideologically motivated purposes and concrete policy recommendations in the motion texts.</p><p>The results of the ideological content analyses and the comparison show that the compulsory school policy of the Liberal Party can be categorized as conservative, not only vis-à-vis a universal definition of liberalism and conservatism, but also in comparison with the compulsory school policy of the Conservative Party.</p>
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A Guerra Civil de 1851 na Nova Granada: disputas e representações / The civil war of 1851 in New Granada: contexts and renditionsFreitas, Eduardo Antonio Pereira de 24 November 2017 (has links)
O objetivo desta dissertação é analisar como o Partido Conservador, o Partido Liberal e os artesãos, mobilizados pelos liberais, interpretaram e justificaram sua participação na Guerra Civil de 1851 na Nova Granada. O capítulo1sintetiza o desenvolvimento político do país, desde o fim do período colonial até o momento em que se desenvolve o conflito armado. O capítulo 2 debruça-se sobre a conjuntura granadina de meados do século XIX e apresenta a Guerra Civil de 1851, analisando a produção historiográfica a respeito do tema. Os três capítulos seguintes, que formam a segunda parte da dissertação, discutem as representações que as distintas forças políticas faziam de si mesmas, de seus adversários e da sociedade que os circundava. Um epílogo conclui a dissertação, dando particular destaque ao indulto concedido aos insurgentes conservadores após o desfecho da Guerra. / The goal of this dissertation is to analyze how the Conservative Party, the Liberal Party and the craftsmen, mobilized by the Liberals, have interpreted and justified their involvement in the Civil War of 1851 in New Granada. Chapter 1 summarizes the political development of the country, starting at the end of the colonial period until the moment when the armed conflict developed. Chapter 2 deals with the grenadine context during the mid-19th century and presents the Civil War of 1851, analyzing the historical production on the subject. The following three chapters, that form the second part of the dissertation, discuss the representations that different political forces made of themselves, their opponents and the surrounding society. An epilogue concludes the essay with particular prominence to the pardon granted to conservative insurgents, after the outcome of the war.
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Genio e sregolatezza di un liberale ticinese: Romeo Manzoni (1847-1912) / Genius and Intemperance in a Liberal from Ticino Canton: Romeo Manzoni (1847-1912)SCALCINATI, MARIACRISTINA 27 March 2007 (has links)
Romeo Manzoni (1847-1912) fu uno dei protagonisti delle vicende politiche del Cantone Ticino nella seconda metà dell'Ottocento e i primi anni del Novecento.
Una prima parte del lavoro è dedicata alla formazione di Romeo Manzoni: la famiglia, gli studi, l'ingresso nella vita politica, l'attività di educatore nel collegio femminile da lui fondato a Maroggia. Una seconda parte prende in considerazione il ruolo di Romeo Manzoni all'interno del Partito Liberale Ticinese dapprima nel Cantone Ticino, con particolare riferimento alla Rivoluzione del 1890, e successivamente alla sua attività di Consigliere Nazionale a Berna.
Un'ultima parte tratta le linee fondamentali del pensiero politico di Romeo Manzoni.
La ricerca è inoltre corredata di una serie di Appendici che descrivono le fonti manoscritte e non, conservate nei diversi Archivi elvetici e italiani. / Romeo Manzoni (1847-1912) was one of the protagonists of the political events in Ticino Canton in the second half of 19th century and at the beginning of 20th century.
The first part of this work deals with Romeo Manzoni's forming: his family, his education, his approach to political life and his activity as an educator in the girls boarding school he founded in Maroggia. The second part deals with Romeo Manzoni's role as a member of the Liberal Party of Ticino considering his activity both in Ticino Canton - with particular attention to the Revolution of 1980- and in Berna as a national Councillor. The last section of the work deals with the fundamental features of Romeo Manzoni's political thought. A series of appendixes describing manuscript and non-manuscript sources available in Italian and Swiss archives is provided.
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Multi-level party politics : the Liberal Party from the ground upKoop, Royce Abraham James 05 1900 (has links)
The organizations of national and provincial parties in Canada are understood to be separated from one another. However, it is not known whether this separation extends to the constituency-level organizations of those parties. In order to provide a better understanding of how national and provincial parties are linked at the local level (if at all), this thesis describes and accounts for the local organizations of the national Liberal Party and the provincial Liberal parties in sixteen national constituencies selected from the provinces of British Columbia, Ontario, and New Brunswick.
Information from interviews with local party activists and participant observation in the ridings is used to develop a continuum of constituency-level party organizations. Descriptions of the activist bases, constituency associations, and local campaigns in each riding allow for each local organization to be placed along this continuum between integrated local organizations, which share important linkages between the national and provincial levels, and differentiated local organizations, where no such linkages exist. The placement of local organizations along this continuum is accounted for by (1) similarities or differences between the national and provincial party systems in the three provinces studied; (2) the actions of incumbent members of the national Parliament and provincial legislatures; and (3) characteristics of the constituencies. The patterns identified lead to a classification of four types of local organizations – One Political World, Interconnected Political Worlds, Distinctive Political Worlds, and Two Political Worlds – that illuminate the different forms of linkages between national and provincial parties that exist at the constituency level.
This examination of the local organizations of the Liberal Party calls into question the academic consensus on the separation of national and provincial parties in Canada. Instead, the Liberal Party is characterized as an unevenly integrated party, where the parliamentary and extra-parliamentary parties are separated from provincial counterparts, but where the national and provincial parties on the ground are oftentimes integrated.
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Governing the “Government Party”: Liberal Party of Canada Leadership Conventions of 1948, 1958 and 1968Falconer, Thirstan January 2012 (has links)
During the twentieth century, as Canadian voters began to associate the brand of their major political parties with the characteristics of their leaders, the Liberal Party of Canada’s leadership races evolved into events of national importance. This study examines this transformation through the 1948, 1958 and 1968 leadership conventions. It incorporates perspectives from inside the Liberal Party as well as the Canadian media’s portrayals of the conventions. This thesis explores the alternating pattern of anglophone and francophone Party leaders, the complications associated with the predictability of the outcome, the evolution of convention tactics to recruit delegate support, Party (dis)unity throughout the contests, and the political science theories that deconstruct the conventions and predict outcomes. It also details how, over time, the political ambitions of senior-ranking members trumped the interests the Liberal Party.
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