Canadian Foreign Policy

Defining the National Interest

By (author) Steven Kendall Holloway
Categories: Politics and government, Society and Social Sciences
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Paperback : 9781551118161, 276 pages, September 2006

Table of contents

List of Tables and Figures

Introduction to the National Interest Perspective

1. Defining the National Interest

2. Sovereignty and Secure Borders

3. Defining the Enemy and National Defence

4. Defining the New Enemy: From the Cold War to Jihad

5. International Security and Alternatives to Traditional Defence: Neutrality, Disarmament, Collective Security, and Peacekeeping

6. Achieving Political Autonomy

7. Preserving Political Autonomy

8. Defending Economic and Cultural Autonomy

9. Preserving National Unity

10. Ensuring Economic Growth and Welfare

11. The Projection of Canadian Identity as a National Interest

12. Canadian National Interests: From the Realm of Ideas to the Realm of Practices

Appendix: Canadian and US Leaders since 1861

Glossary

Bibliography

Index

Description

In Canadian Foreign Policy: Defining the National Interest Steven Holloway puts the "policy" back into "foreign policy. " By returning to the National Interest Perspective (NIP), this book provides an important method of analysis for foreign policy issues. As adopted here, the NIP forces the reader to think explicitly about the goals of government action and the assumptions that underlie them. This approach requires planning ahead and prioritizing Canadian objectives. It demands that Canada set aside the preoccupation with the interests of each societal group, province, or region, and think about what is to the benefit of all Canadians.  No matter how dissonant the resulting broad public debate might be, Steven Holloway advocates the importance of finding general, large-scale interests that unite the national political community. For the reader, this book organizes and simplifies the various threads of Canada’s foreign relations by concentrating them into a handful of enduring themes or national interests: national security (including territorial sovereignty), political autonomy, national unity, economic prosperity, and principled self-image (identity).