Wishful thinking: Democracy promotion in the Americas under Harper

The following analysis is divided into four parts. First, I review the various explanations given in the academic literature for Canada's uneven policy performance on democracy promotion and on the Americas in general. I emphasize the potential usefulness of an analytical approach that emphasiz...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal (Toronto) 2012-07, Vol.67 (3), p.583-602
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description The following analysis is divided into four parts. First, I review the various explanations given in the academic literature for Canada's uneven policy performance on democracy promotion and on the Americas in general. I emphasize the potential usefulness of an analytical approach that emphasizes the social construction of democracy promotion in Latin America and the Caribbean as a national interest. In a second section I evaluate the rhetoric, versus the reality, of democracy promotion in the western hemisphere under the Harper government. Third, I attribute the Harper government's weak policy performance to difficulties in framing the Canadian advancement of democracy in the region as a national priority. In a concluding section I stress the need for a revisionist exercise to attune Canadian policy toward Latin America and the Caribbean to Canada's national interests. Adapted from the source document.
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subjects Canada
Caribbean
Democracy
Democracy promotion
Foreign policy
Governance
Government
Government policy
Harper, Stephen
Human rights
International development
International relations
Latin America
Leadership
National interest
National interests
Parliamentary system
Policy analysis
Political ideas
Prime ministers
Social construction
Western hemisphere
title Wishful thinking: Democracy promotion in the Americas under Harper
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