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ID154637
Title ProperCanadian foreign policy from the roaring 1990s
LanguageENG
AuthorMomani, Bessma
Summary / Abstract (Note)As a field of study, Canadian Foreign Policy has undergone dramatic changes over the last three decades, becoming disconnected from debates about our identity and values and more focused on Canadian foreign and defence policy. This transition in Canadian Foreign Policy reflects the changing priorities of successive Canadian governments and structural shifts in Canadian academia. Yet, such change has unfolded gradually and incrementally, such that key challenges remain for scholars interested in working, presenting, and publishing in Canadian Foreign Policy. Using my own experiences as a student and teacher of foreign policy in Canada, I reflect on these transformations within Canadian Foreign Policy and their implications, beginning with the “golden age” of Canadian Foreign Policy during the 1990s to its decline under the Harper government and, finally, to our current climate of fragmented academic and professional research. In the current climate, participating in traditional and “new” social media places professional incentives (namely, tenure and promotion via peer-reviewed outlets) in tension with emerging opportunities to engage in more open critical analysis of Canadian Foreign Policy.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal Vol. 72, No.2; Jun 2017: p.192-202
Journal SourceInternational Journal Vol: 72 No 2
Key WordsDefence Policy ;  Social Media ;  Canadian Foreign Policy ;  Traditional Media ;  Harper Government ;  Academia ;  CFP ;  Professional Research ;  Bill C51


 
 
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