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GREG DONAGHY (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   178191


Celebrating Greg Donaghy / Bothwell, Robert; English, John ; Hillmer, Norman   Journal Article
Hillmer, Norman Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Three colleagues pay tribute to Greg Donaghy, who at the time of his death on 1 July 2020 was the co-editor of International Journal and Director of the Bill Graham Centre for Contemporary International History at the University of Toronto. Dr Donaghy’s imaginative international history expanded the canvas of Canadian foreign policy beyond the traditional limits of the North Atlantic Triangle. As an author, editor, and mentor, he redefined the way that Canada’s world looks to its scholars.
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2
ID:   178195


Foreign policy advice in the Prime Minister’s Office: Mackenzie King to Brian Mulroney / Bryden, Penny   Journal Article
Bryden, Penny Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The Department of External Affairs (DEA) has always been anomalous—more closely associated with the prime minister than any other department, yet also more independent from cabinet in its necessarily far-flung structure than any other department. The unique position of the DEA has meant that its influence has been closely tied to changes in the structure of the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO). This article examines the ways that the advisory capacity of the DEA has gradually been eroded, while the foreign policy advice from the PMO has concomitantly increased, in the period between the 1930s and the 1990s.
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3
ID:   178197


Mental maps and Canada’s post-war Asian policy / Webster, David   Journal Article
Webster, David Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article takes up the concept of mental maps as lens through which to survey Canada–Asia relations. Before Canadians could embrace Asia politically and economically, they had to stop imagining Asia as culturally distant. Their mental maps—the way they imagined the world—formed the invisible background to policy-making. Through an engagement with Greg Donaghy’s work on Canadian relations with Asia, this article makes the case for using mental maps to understand trans-Pacific relations.
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