How Ottawa Spends, 2013-2014

How Ottawa Spends, 2013-2014

Author: Christopher Stoney

Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Published: 2013-09-01

Total Pages: 356

ISBN-13: 0773590005

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The 2013-14 edition of How Ottawa Spends critically examines national politics, priorities, and policies with a close lens on Stephen Harper's Conservative party during the middle of their first term as a majority. Contributors from across Canada examine the federal government and its not uncommon mid-term problems but also its considerable agenda of long term plans, both set in the midst of national economic fragility and a global fiscal and debt crisis. Individual chapters examine several related political, policy, and spending realms including the Budget Action Plan, the ten year Canada Health Transfer Plan, the Canada Pension Plan, and Old Age Security reforms. The contributors also consider austerity related public sector downsizing and strategic spending reviews, national energy, and related environmental strategies, and the growing Harper practice of "one-off" federalism.


How Ottawa Spends, 2014-2015

How Ottawa Spends, 2014-2015

Author: G. Bruce Doern

Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Published: 2014-10-01

Total Pages: 207

ISBN-13: 0773584994

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The 2014-15 edition of How Ottawa Spends critically examines national politics and related fiscal, economic, and social priorities and policies, with an emphasis on the now long-running Harper-linked Senate scandal and the serious challenges to Harper's leadership and controlling style of attack politics. Contributors from across Canada examine the Conservative government agenda both in terms of its macroeconomic fiscal policy and electoral success since 2006 and also as it plans for a 2015 electoral victory with the aid of a healthy surplus budgetary war chest. Individual chapters examine several closely linked political, policy, and spending realms including the growing strength and nature of the Justin Trudeau-led Liberal Party challenge, the 2014 Harper Economic Action Plan, the demise of federal environmental policy under Harper’s responsible resource development strategy, the Conservative’s crime and punishment agenda, the growing evidence regarding the federal government’s muzzling of scientists and evidence in federal policy formation, and the now five-year story of the Harper creation, treatment, and role of the Parliamentary Budget Officer.


How Ottawa Spends, 2012-2013

How Ottawa Spends, 2012-2013

Author: G. Bruce Doern

Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 300

ISBN-13: 0773540946

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A critical examination of the federal government policy agenda in the context of Canada's opposition power structure and the global debt crisis.


How Ottawa Spends, 2010-2011

How Ottawa Spends, 2010-2011

Author: G. Bruce Doern

Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 317

ISBN-13: 0773537287

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Fresh takes on the recession and the federal minority government.


Canadian Public Budgeting in the Age of Crises

Canadian Public Budgeting in the Age of Crises

Author: G. Bruce Doern

Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Published: 2013-04-18

Total Pages: 297

ISBN-13: 0773588523

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A broad look at attempts to address economic crises by various governments, with insights into how budget decisions are made.


Open Federalism Revisited

Open Federalism Revisited

Author: James Farney

Publisher: University of Toronto Press

Published: 2021-11-08

Total Pages: 358

ISBN-13: 148750960X

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Open Federalism Revisited provides a systematic, encompassing assessment of Canadian federalism in the Harper era, offering a fresh perspective in federalism scholarship.


Keeping Canada Running

Keeping Canada Running

Author: G. Bruce Doern

Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Published: 2021-09-29

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 0228007240

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The federal government's promises to "build back better" and "build back green" highlight opportunities to reimagine Canadian infrastructure. In this groundbreaking study, authors Bruce Doern, Christopher Stoney, and Robert Hilton provide the first comprehensive overview of Canadian infrastructure policy, examining the impact and implications of the COVID-19 pandemic and rapid technological change as Canada looks to recover and rebuild. Covering more than fifty years across many sectors, the authors identify numerous challenges that have contributed to Canada's growing infrastructure deficit and suboptimal outcomes including political interference in the choice of infrastructure projects; challenges for multilevel governance such as distortion of local priorities, blurred accountability, and unsustainable maintenance costs for municipalities; the growing reliance on public-private partnerships that limit transparency and public scrutiny; and increased corruption associated with infrastructure projects. Transforming infrastructure is notoriously difficult yet vital at a time of rapid technological change. It is estimated that 75 percent of the infrastructure that will exist in 2050 does not exist today. This makes it crucial that Canada invest in future-proof infrastructure with the capacity to facilitate economic growth and the expansion of urban centres, mitigate and adapt to the impacts of climate change, and ensure resilience in response to crises and disasters. Keeping Canada Running offers a timely assessment of these issues, Canada's COVID-19 response, and the potential contribution of the newly launched Canadian Infrastructure Bank.


A Civil Society?

A Civil Society?

Author: Miriam Smith

Publisher: University of Toronto Press

Published: 2018-02-05

Total Pages: 225

ISBN-13: 1487593678

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A Civil Society? surveys the main approaches to the study of group politics in Canada, with a strong comparative perspective. Unique to this brief and accessible text is a comprehensive theoretical framework that helps students evaluate policy areas surveyed in the book, while also pointing them toward future study. This new edition opens with a discussion of power, political institutions, and identity. It goes on to explore group and social movement activity across a range of institutions including the House of Commons, the bureaucracy, and the courts as well as mobilization through social media and the electoral system. Throughout, Smith systematically integrates consideration of the role of gender, racialization, and indigeneity in contemporary Canadian group and movement politics.


Struggling for Social Citizenship

Struggling for Social Citizenship

Author: Michael J. Prince

Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Published: 2016-05-01

Total Pages: 311

ISBN-13: 0773598820

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The Canada Pension Plan disability benefit is a monthly payment available to disabled citizens who have contributed to the CPP and are unable to work regularly at any job. Covering the program’s origins, early implementation, liberalization of benefits, and more recent restraint and reorientation of this program, Struggling for Social Citizenship is the first detailed examination of the single largest public contributory disability plan in the country. Focusing on broad policy trends and program developments and highlighting the role of cabinet ministers, members of Parliament, public servants, policy advisors, and other political actors, Michael Prince examines the pension reform agendas and records of the Pearson, Trudeau, Mulroney, Chrétien, Martin, and Harper prime ministerial eras. Shedding light on the immediate world of applicants and clients of the CPP disability benefit, this study reviews academic literature and government documents, features interviews with officials, and provides an analysis of administrative data regarding trends in expenditures, caseloads, decisions, and appeals related to CPP disability benefits. Struggling for Social Citizenship looks into the ways in which disability has been defined in programs and distinguished from ability in given periods, how these distinctions have operated, been administered, contested and regulated, as well as how, through income programs, disability is a social construct and administrative category. Weaving together literature on social policy, political science, and disability studies, Struggling for Social Citizenship produces an innovative evaluation of Canadian citizenship and social rights.


Opening the Government of Canada

Opening the Government of Canada

Author: Amanda Clarke

Publisher: UBC Press

Published: 2019-02-15

Total Pages: 312

ISBN-13: 0774836954

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Opening the Government of Canada presents a compelling case for the importance of a more open model of governance in the digital age – but a model that also continues to uphold democratic principles at the heart of the Westminster system. Drawing on interviews with public officials and extensive analysis of government documents and social media accounts, Clarke details the untold story of the Canadian federal bureaucracy’s efforts to adapt to new digital pressures from the mid-2000s onward. This book argues that the bureaucracy’s tradition of closed government, fuelled by today’s antagonistic political communications culture, is at odds with evolving citizen expectations and new digital policy tools, including social media, crowdsourcing, and open data. Striking a balance between reform and tradition, Opening the Government of Canada concludes with a series of pragmatic recommendations that lay out a roadmap for building a democratically robust, digital-era federal government.