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CONTINENTALISM (3) answer(s).
 
SrlItem
1
ID:   106836


Europe's places in Canadian strategic culture (1949-2009) / Merand, Frederic; Vandemoortele, Antoine   Journal Article
Merand, Frederic Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Key Words Internationalism  Europe  Canada  Continentalism  Culture Heritage 
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2
ID:   125111


Shanghai Cooperation Organization: elaboration of strategy / Vorobyov, V   Journal Article
Vorobyov, V Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract THE SHANGHAI Cooperation Organization (SCO) has become one of the leading components of Russia's foreign policy both doctrinally and on the practical level. It is in Russia's long-term interests for the SCO to stand firmly on its feet and move steadily forward in its development, strengthening its reputation as a macro-organization of a new type. Russia's upcoming presidency of the Organization in 2014-2015 imposes an additional obligation on our state to make a proactive and significant contribution to the formulation of SCO strategy.
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3
ID:   138292


Third option: an idea whose time has finally come? / Hancock, John   Article
Hancock, John Article
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Summary/Abstract Lately, Mitchell Sharp’s 1972 Third Option paper has acquired a new resonance—and a new readership—as Canada again finds itself worrying about dependence on the United States and revisiting dreams of new economic linkages overseas. Although the Third Option was seen at the time as a radical new call for Canadian economic and cultural independence, it was actually the latest chapter in a long-running foreign policy debate about whether Canada’s economic future lay in embracing—or resisting—the powerful pull of continentalism. This article re-examines Sharp’s Third Option initiative against that broader historical background. It argues that the Third Option, like Canada’s previous quests for economic independence, was prompted as much by fears of rising US protectionism as by concerns about eroding Canadian sovereignty. The paper also notes that the Third Option, again like past efforts at trade diversification, largely failed, and that Canada–US integration only deepened in the decade after Sharp launched his initiative. However, the long-run trend toward growing dependency on the United States may finally be reversing, and Canada’s trade and investment flows overseas are likely to increase in the decades to come. This paper argues not for a re-heated Third Option but for a fourth one instead—the simultaneous pursuit of continental and global integration.
Key Words Trade  Canada  Protectionism  Diversification  National Policy  Continentalism 
Third Option  Mitchell Sharp 
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