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5. The Changing Normativity of the Canadian Welfare State

  • Neil Hibbert
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© 2019 University of Toronto Press, Toronto

© 2019 University of Toronto Press, Toronto

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Acknowledgments ix
  4. Introduction 1
  5. Part I: Ideology
  6. 1. From Grant to Hayek: The Shifting Nature of Canadian Conservatism 21
  7. 2. Canadian Liberalism as a Distinctive Tradition 42
  8. 3. What Does “Progressive” Mean? The Political Theory of Social Democracy and Reform Liberalism in Canada 69
  9. 4. It Don’t Mean a Thing if It Ain’t Got that Swing: Ideology in the Age of Emotion 92
  10. Part II: Equality and Social Justice
  11. 5. The Changing Normativity of the Canadian Welfare State 121
  12. 6. “How We Treat Our Women Is Our Business!”: Legal Pluralism’s Impact on Women’s Citizenship in Federations 145
  13. 7. Autonomy, Rights, and Euthanasia Policy: Lessons from John Stuart Mill 169
  14. 8. What’s Wrong with Private Schools? 193
  15. Part III: Democracy and Citizenship
  16. 9. Deliberative Democracy: The Canadian Experience 219
  17. 10. Democracy and the Problem of Constitutional Change in Canada 242
  18. 11. Does Canada Have a Founding Moment? 265
  19. Part IV: Ethnic Diversity and Minority Rights
  20. 12. Self-Determination Theory: Political and Psychological 289
  21. 13. Beyond Multiculturalism: Indigenous Normativity and the Search for a Legitimate Constitution 315
  22. 14. Equality Rights, Multiculturalism, and Public Reason in Canada 343
  23. Part V: Nationalism
  24. 15. Lament for a Pre-modern Nation? George Grant and Michael Byers on Canadian Identity 363
  25. 16. Culture and National Identity in Quebec 383
  26. 17. The Conqueror’s Mask: Canada as an Empire-State 409
  27. Part VI: Canada in the World
  28. 18. The Legitimacy of Judicial Review: The Strength of the Weak 437
  29. 19. Canada and the International Responsibilities to Protect and Prosecute in Cases of Mass Atrocity 459
  30. 20. Immigration and Borders in Canada: Looking Outward, Looking Inward, and Breaking Away from Legacies 480
  31. Contributors 503
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