Canada's Fluid Borders: Trade, Investment, Travel, Migration

Author:   Geoffrey Hale ,  Greg Anderson ,  Patricia Dewey-Lambert ,  Monica Gattinger
Publisher:   University of Ottawa Press
ISBN:  

9780776629360


Pages:   216
Publication Date:   05 January 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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Canada's Fluid Borders: Trade, Investment, Travel, Migration


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Overview

Les politiques de commerce et d'investissement font face a un environnement geopolitique en evolution. Ils font face egalement a des defis resultant des interactions et des limites propres aux accords sur le commerce et l'investissement avec d'autres pays.Ces defis lies au passage des frontieres internationales adoptent diverses formes et relevent de secteurs varies comprenant le commerce de l'energie, la securite alimentaire et des enjeux lies a l'environnement et a la sante publique. De facon similaire, les dynamiques frontalieres se distinguent considerablement en matiere de flux transfrontaliers de tourisme, de main-d'oeuvre qualifiee et de migration irreguliere.Cet ouvrage revele et analyse les facteurs qui gouvernent l'activite economique et l'interaction humaine depuisla frontiere "" poreuse "" du Canada. Les collaborateurs de cet ouvrage collectif examinent les principaux aspects politiques, techniques et administratifs, internes au Canada, qui determinent les conditions et lescontraintes d'une politique internationale efficace et de la cooperation en matiere de reglementation.Publie en Anglais.

Full Product Details

Author:   Geoffrey Hale ,  Greg Anderson ,  Patricia Dewey-Lambert ,  Monica Gattinger
Publisher:   University of Ottawa Press
Imprint:   University of Ottawa Press
Weight:   0.227kg
ISBN:  

9780776629360


ISBN 10:   0776629360
Pages:   216
Publication Date:   05 January 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Reviews

"Canada's Fluid Identities focuses on international negotiations primarily with the United States on issues with a transborder dimension (a process the editors describe as 'bordering'). Geoffrey Hale stresses the need for greater administrative cooperation with American border officials to manage rising levels of migration, complex issues of food safety, and the complex rules governing Canada's growing economic integration with the United States. Greg Anderson examines the 'spaghetti' of rules governing foreign investment flows and calls for 'a coordinated approach' to the issue (p. 82), while Monica Gattinger points to the challenges Canadian policymakers face in regulating the Canadian oil and gas industries, given the transformation of North America energy markets and the need to address climate change. The remaining chapters deal with the importance of Rules of Origin (ROO), temporary entry regulations, and food safety and technical standards in trade agreements, with particular reference to the recently renegotiated Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement. The main theme of the book is that 'American exceptionalism is a luxury that Canada cannot afford' (p. 148) and that Canada's goal must be closer integration of American and Canadian policies. Several of the authors do, however, admit that given the imbalance of power between Canada and the United States, it will not be easy to negotiate agreements that protect Canadian interests. The editors believe that Patricia Lambert's chapter on cross-border-tourism policy in the Pacific north-west economic region provides a model for closer regional integration but what Lambert actually shows is the limited degree of integration that can be achieved even in regional tourism agreements, since the interests of Canada and the United States only overlap to a limited degree. Although many of the issues discussed in the book are very technical, the editors made the wise decision to keep 'theoretical, scholarly jargon' to a minimum (pp. 180-1).--Phillip Buckner, University of New Brunswick ""https: //www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/10.3828/bjcs.2022.13"""


Author Information

Greg Anderson is professor of Political Science at the University of Alberta. He earned a master's degree in American history from the University of Alberta and completed his PhD at Johns Hopkins University. Both are widely published in the fields of political economy, international trade and investment policies, Canada-US relations, North American integration, and border-related issues.

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