"Co-operative and State Ownership in Northern Saskatchewan Under the CCF Government" examines the use of social ownership as a policy instrument by the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) government in Northern Saskatchewan from 1944 to 1964. Led by Tommy Douglas, the new government defined numerous policy problems in the North stemming from both an economy dominated by private ownership and unstable natural resource based industries. Using two types of social ownership, crown corporations and co-operatives, the CCF sought to rectify these problems and improve the standard of living in Northern Saskatchewan. This study intends to determine whether the CCF government achieved its policy goals in Northern Saskatchewan and concludes that...
NUMBER OF PAGES: ii This study analyzes the development of the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation a...
Compared to many other places in the world, Canada is a peaceful, safe, economically well-develope...
This study examines the development gap that has emerged between the co-operative sectors of the Can...
"Co-operative and State Ownership in Northern Saskatchewan Under the CCF Government" examines the us...
The purpose of this study is to examine CCF-CCL relations in the Saskatchewan public service during ...
"Battling Parish Priests, Bootleggers, and Fur Sharks: CCF Colonialism in Northern Saskatchewan," e...
It is commonly accepted that a political divide exists between Saskatchewan and Alberta. Both provin...
This paper uses the life and politics of one man to analyse the dynamics of settler colonialism in ...
Throughout the course of Canadian political history, many prairie populist movements have developed ...
This thesis brings together for the first time, in an organised account, Saskatchewan’s search for a...
The Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) was one of the most influential political parties in C...
The subject of this thesis is "The Co-operative Government in Saskatchewan, 1929-1934: Response to ...
In 1944, the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) entered northern Saskatchewan with the goal o...
In the fall of 1930, in an action anticipated as "nothing less than the consummation of Confederati...
The settlers who came to Regina in the 1880's thought of themselves as Central Canadians involved i...
NUMBER OF PAGES: ii This study analyzes the development of the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation a...
Compared to many other places in the world, Canada is a peaceful, safe, economically well-develope...
This study examines the development gap that has emerged between the co-operative sectors of the Can...
"Co-operative and State Ownership in Northern Saskatchewan Under the CCF Government" examines the us...
The purpose of this study is to examine CCF-CCL relations in the Saskatchewan public service during ...
"Battling Parish Priests, Bootleggers, and Fur Sharks: CCF Colonialism in Northern Saskatchewan," e...
It is commonly accepted that a political divide exists between Saskatchewan and Alberta. Both provin...
This paper uses the life and politics of one man to analyse the dynamics of settler colonialism in ...
Throughout the course of Canadian political history, many prairie populist movements have developed ...
This thesis brings together for the first time, in an organised account, Saskatchewan’s search for a...
The Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) was one of the most influential political parties in C...
The subject of this thesis is "The Co-operative Government in Saskatchewan, 1929-1934: Response to ...
In 1944, the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) entered northern Saskatchewan with the goal o...
In the fall of 1930, in an action anticipated as "nothing less than the consummation of Confederati...
The settlers who came to Regina in the 1880's thought of themselves as Central Canadians involved i...
NUMBER OF PAGES: ii This study analyzes the development of the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation a...
Compared to many other places in the world, Canada is a peaceful, safe, economically well-develope...
This study examines the development gap that has emerged between the co-operative sectors of the Can...