This study examines the foreign policy views of the Canadian thinker, George Grant. It focuses on the years between Mackenzie King’s re-election in 1935 and the Liberal party’s return to power under Lester Pearson in 1963. During this period, Grant argued, Canada was transformed from a British dependent to a satellite of the United States, a process that he believed had been accelerated by the continentalist economic and security policies of successive Liberal governments. As a young man during World War II, Grant admired the United States of F. D. Roosevelt. But as he began to contemplate the threat that a postwar Pax Americana posed to the societies of the Old World, and, ultimately, to Canada, his misgivings grew. His attempts to under...
grantor: University of TorontoFew historians consider the 1930s as the formative period of...
grantor: University of TorontoWhen Canadian policy makers in WWII reflected upon the event...
Heather Metcalfe Doctoral Abstract, Ph.D. program, 2009 Department of History, University of Toron...
The central theme of this study is the plight of the small power entrapped in a power struggle betwe...
The central theme of this study is the plight of the small power entrapped in a power struggle betwe...
The question is, why did Canada's international stature experience a seemingly spectacular decline d...
David Peddle and Neil Robertson consider a longstanding debate between George Grant and James Doul...
Liberal internationalism remains the dominant perspective of those who study Canadian foreign policy...
It has been supported by the Charles University Research Centre No. 9 (UNCE/HUM/009) and the Charles...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines political ideology in Canada in t...
The purpose of the article is to trace how the geopolitical perceptions of Canadians have changed si...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines political ideology in Canada in t...
grantor: University of TorontoFew historians consider the 1930s as the formative period of...
The purpose of the article is to trace how the geopolitical perceptions of Canadians have changed si...
grantor: University of TorontoWhen Canadian policy makers in WWII reflected upon the event...
grantor: University of TorontoFew historians consider the 1930s as the formative period of...
grantor: University of TorontoWhen Canadian policy makers in WWII reflected upon the event...
Heather Metcalfe Doctoral Abstract, Ph.D. program, 2009 Department of History, University of Toron...
The central theme of this study is the plight of the small power entrapped in a power struggle betwe...
The central theme of this study is the plight of the small power entrapped in a power struggle betwe...
The question is, why did Canada's international stature experience a seemingly spectacular decline d...
David Peddle and Neil Robertson consider a longstanding debate between George Grant and James Doul...
Liberal internationalism remains the dominant perspective of those who study Canadian foreign policy...
It has been supported by the Charles University Research Centre No. 9 (UNCE/HUM/009) and the Charles...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines political ideology in Canada in t...
The purpose of the article is to trace how the geopolitical perceptions of Canadians have changed si...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines political ideology in Canada in t...
grantor: University of TorontoFew historians consider the 1930s as the formative period of...
The purpose of the article is to trace how the geopolitical perceptions of Canadians have changed si...
grantor: University of TorontoWhen Canadian policy makers in WWII reflected upon the event...
grantor: University of TorontoFew historians consider the 1930s as the formative period of...
grantor: University of TorontoWhen Canadian policy makers in WWII reflected upon the event...
Heather Metcalfe Doctoral Abstract, Ph.D. program, 2009 Department of History, University of Toron...