1. Introduction
Robert C. Vipond
Part I: National Unity and the Thirty Years of Travail
2. “Quebec and the Right to National Self-Determination” (1974)
3. “The Marketing of National Unity” (1980)
4. “A passionate Canadian Pepin heard voice of communities within federalism”
The Gazette (Montreal) (1995)
5. “Not Spicer and Not the B & B: Reflections of an Insider on the Workings of the Pepin-Robarts Task Force on Canadian Unity” (1993)
6. The long Decade of the 1980s: David Cameron in Conversation
7. “Lord Durham Then and Now” (1990)
8. Maison Egg Roll (1992)
9. “A very Canadian independence movement; Quebec separatists avoid the language of an oppressed people: They know it would be silly”
The Ottawa Citizen (1995)
10. “Responsible government: Quebec would serve its people better if it were to agree to play by the constitutional rules instead of a unilateral declaration of independence”
The Gazette (Montreal) (1996)
11. “Does Ottawa Know It Is Part of the Problem?” (1996)
12. “The court's supreme wisdom”
The Ottawa Citizen (1998)
13. “National Unity and Paradigm Shifts” (1998)
Part II: Contemporary Canadian Federalism: Policies, Practices, and Values
14. “Intergovernmental Relations and Democracy: An Oxymoron If There Ever Was One?” (2001)
Richard Simeon and David R. Cameron
15. “Intergovernmental Relations in Canada: The Emergence of Collaborative Federalism” (2002)
David R. Cameron and Richard Simeon
16. “Inter-Legislative Federalism” (2002)
17. “Recognizing Quebec in the Constitution of Canada: Using the Bilateral Constitutional Amendment Process” (2008)
David R. Cameron and Jacqueline D. Krikorian
18. “The Paradox of Federalism: Some Practical Reflections” (2009)
19. “Church and State in a Binational Multicultural Society: The Case of Canada” (2013)
20. “Canada’s Constitutional Legitimacy Deficit: Learning to Live with It” (2015)
Conclusion
David R. Cameron
Copyrights and Permissions
Timeline