Quebec’s modern international outlook and its current paradiplomacy can be dated largely from the Quiet Revolution of the 1960s. Since then, the provincial government in Quebec City and the federal government in Ottawa have had to tread a fine line in accommodating each other’s constitutional rights in the field of international relations—a line that has occasionally been breached, especially in the years following the Quiet Revolution and in critical periods such as those prior to the 1980 and 1995 referenda. Foreign governments have also had to engage in careful diplomacy in order to avoid upsetting either Ottawa or Quebec City—and this has been especially true in the case of the countries historically most involved with Canada and Quebec...
Le Québec est l’un des États fédérés les plus actifs en relations internationales. Toutefois, l’étud...
L'objectif de ce mémoire est de jeter les bases d'un nouveau récit historique portant sur les relat...
The question as to whether the Canadian provinces possess international status caused much ink to fl...
Canadian diplomacy has greatly shaped Canada’s debates over language and vice versa. How has the his...
The Quiet Revolution, and the unceasing changes that characterize the Québec of the 60’s marked an e...
In this article the author presents a view on federal-provincial relations which he sees as characte...
Between 1763 and 2013, Quebec is armed because the province is concerned by the security and defense...
Quebec-U.S. interactions frm 1976 to 1980 are analysed in relation to American apprehension over the...
In discovering the uniqueness of Quebec, its culture and politics, this paper follows an historical ...
The years between 1945 and 1957 represent a time period in which Canadian foreign policy emerged. I...
Entre 1763 et 2013, le Québec est armes car il se retrouve entraîné au coeur des questions de sécuri...
This research project intended to analyze and understand the relationship between Third World decolo...
This thesis deals with transformations of French foreign policy towards Québec and Canada. The first...
During the early Cold War, as the Soviet menace placed Canada in between two hostile superpowers, th...
This dissertation examines the Canada-Quebec-France triangle from the period after the Second World ...
Le Québec est l’un des États fédérés les plus actifs en relations internationales. Toutefois, l’étud...
L'objectif de ce mémoire est de jeter les bases d'un nouveau récit historique portant sur les relat...
The question as to whether the Canadian provinces possess international status caused much ink to fl...
Canadian diplomacy has greatly shaped Canada’s debates over language and vice versa. How has the his...
The Quiet Revolution, and the unceasing changes that characterize the Québec of the 60’s marked an e...
In this article the author presents a view on federal-provincial relations which he sees as characte...
Between 1763 and 2013, Quebec is armed because the province is concerned by the security and defense...
Quebec-U.S. interactions frm 1976 to 1980 are analysed in relation to American apprehension over the...
In discovering the uniqueness of Quebec, its culture and politics, this paper follows an historical ...
The years between 1945 and 1957 represent a time period in which Canadian foreign policy emerged. I...
Entre 1763 et 2013, le Québec est armes car il se retrouve entraîné au coeur des questions de sécuri...
This research project intended to analyze and understand the relationship between Third World decolo...
This thesis deals with transformations of French foreign policy towards Québec and Canada. The first...
During the early Cold War, as the Soviet menace placed Canada in between two hostile superpowers, th...
This dissertation examines the Canada-Quebec-France triangle from the period after the Second World ...
Le Québec est l’un des États fédérés les plus actifs en relations internationales. Toutefois, l’étud...
L'objectif de ce mémoire est de jeter les bases d'un nouveau récit historique portant sur les relat...
The question as to whether the Canadian provinces possess international status caused much ink to fl...