An analysis of current trends in Quebec society and politics and the future of Quebec in the Canadian federation.
After the Quiet Revolution policies in Quebec society were driven by a discourse of sovereignty and Quebec nation-building that fundamentally challenged the legitimacy and integrity of the Canadian federation. Since the 1995 referendum a different set of priorities has come to the fore in Quebec society - health care, education, employment and economic development, security, and the environment. These are the same issues that dominate the public agenda across the country.
Canada: The State of the Federation 2005 explores the significance of this shift - is it a temporary period of calm or an essential realignment of Quebec's relationships with Canada and the rest of the world? Can the abatement of overt nationalist sentiment be attributed to the success of nationalist policies themselves, particularly those relating to the French language? Authors in this volume examine the political economy of Quebec nationalism, the impact of regional and global integration, the rise of new social movements, political party dynamics, the increasingly multicultural character of urban Quebec, and the shifting intergovernmental dynamics in the federation.
Contributors include Tom Courchene (Queen's), Pascale Dufour (Montréal), Peter Graefe (McMaster), Guy Laforest (Laval), Rachel Laforest (Queen's), Micheline Labelle (Québéc á Montréal), Matthew Mendelsohn (Deputy Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs and Democratic Renewal, Ontario), Eric Montpetit, (Montréal), Michael Murphy (North British Columbia), Andrew Parkin (Centre for Research and Information on Canada), Maurice Pinard (McGill), John Richards (Simon Fraser), Daniel Salée, (Concordia), and Brian Tanguay (Wilfrid Laurier).