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15. The Referendum and Its Aftermath
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface ix
- Introduction 1
-
PART ONE. The Reform of Central Institutions in the Charlottetown Accord
- 1. The Reform of Federal Institutions 17
- 2. The Charlottetown Accord Senate: Effective or Emasculated? 37
- 3. Speaking for Ourselves 58
- 4. The Charlottetown Accord and Central Institutions 73
-
PART TWO. The Division of Powers in the Charlottetown Accord
- 5. Division of Powers in the Charlottetown Accord 85
- 6. The Charlottetown Accord and the End of the Exclusiveness of Provincial Jurisdictions 93
- 7. The Charlottetown Accord: A Faulty Framework and a Wrong-headed Compromise 102
- 8. The Dog That Never Barked: Who Killed Asymmetrical Federalism? 107
-
PART THREE. Distinct Society, Aboriginal Rights, and Fundamental Canadian Values
- 9. The Charlottetown Discord and Aboriginal Peoples' Struggle for Fundamental Political Change 117
- 10. Québec, a Nation Divided 152
- 11. The Referendum and Democracy 159
- 12. Sinking Again into the Quagmire of Conflicting Visions, Groups, Underinclusion, and Death by Referendum 163
- 13. The Charlottetown Accord: A Canadian Compromise 171
-
PART FOUR. The Referendum
- 14. The October I 992 Canadian Constitutional Referendum: The Socio-Political Context 185
- 15. The Referendum and Its Aftermath 193
- 16. The Quebec Referendum: Quebeckers Say No 200
-
PART FIVE. The Future of Canada
- 17. The End of Mega Constitutional Politics in Canada? 211
- 18. The Sounds of Silence 222
- 19. Disagreeing on Fundamentals: English Canada and Quebec 249
- 20. Speculations on a Canada without Quebec 264
- Contributors 275
- APPENDIX 1. Consensus Report on the Constitution Charlottetown August 28, I 992 Final Text 279
- APPENDIX 2. Draft Legal Text October 9, 1992 311
- APPENDIX 3. Official Voting Results, by Province 26 October 1992 363
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface ix
- Introduction 1
-
PART ONE. The Reform of Central Institutions in the Charlottetown Accord
- 1. The Reform of Federal Institutions 17
- 2. The Charlottetown Accord Senate: Effective or Emasculated? 37
- 3. Speaking for Ourselves 58
- 4. The Charlottetown Accord and Central Institutions 73
-
PART TWO. The Division of Powers in the Charlottetown Accord
- 5. Division of Powers in the Charlottetown Accord 85
- 6. The Charlottetown Accord and the End of the Exclusiveness of Provincial Jurisdictions 93
- 7. The Charlottetown Accord: A Faulty Framework and a Wrong-headed Compromise 102
- 8. The Dog That Never Barked: Who Killed Asymmetrical Federalism? 107
-
PART THREE. Distinct Society, Aboriginal Rights, and Fundamental Canadian Values
- 9. The Charlottetown Discord and Aboriginal Peoples' Struggle for Fundamental Political Change 117
- 10. Québec, a Nation Divided 152
- 11. The Referendum and Democracy 159
- 12. Sinking Again into the Quagmire of Conflicting Visions, Groups, Underinclusion, and Death by Referendum 163
- 13. The Charlottetown Accord: A Canadian Compromise 171
-
PART FOUR. The Referendum
- 14. The October I 992 Canadian Constitutional Referendum: The Socio-Political Context 185
- 15. The Referendum and Its Aftermath 193
- 16. The Quebec Referendum: Quebeckers Say No 200
-
PART FIVE. The Future of Canada
- 17. The End of Mega Constitutional Politics in Canada? 211
- 18. The Sounds of Silence 222
- 19. Disagreeing on Fundamentals: English Canada and Quebec 249
- 20. Speculations on a Canada without Quebec 264
- Contributors 275
- APPENDIX 1. Consensus Report on the Constitution Charlottetown August 28, I 992 Final Text 279
- APPENDIX 2. Draft Legal Text October 9, 1992 311
- APPENDIX 3. Official Voting Results, by Province 26 October 1992 363