Canada's Foreign and Security Policy
Soft and Hard Strategies of a Middle Power
Edited by Nik Hynek and David Bosold
Foreword by Stephen Clarkson
Table of Contents
Foreword by Stephen Clarkson
Introduction
Part One: Re-Examining Middlepowerhood in Canada's Foreign and Security Policy
1. Whither the Middle Power Identity? Transformations in the Canadian Foreign and Security Milieus, Tom Keating
2. 'Middlepowerhood' and 'Middlepowermanship' in Canadian Foreign Policy, Kim Richard Nossal
3. Canada as a Middle, Model, or Civilian Power: What's in a Name?, David Bosold
Part Two: Re-Examining Canada's Soft Power
4. How 'Soft' Is Canada's Soft Power in the Field of Human Security?, Nik Hynek
5. The Transformation of Canada's Development Policy through the Security-Development Approach, Sárka Waisová
6. The Diplomacy of a Middle Power: Innovation and Its Limits, Jozef Bátora
7. Canadian Middle Power Identity, Environmental Biopolitics, and Human Insecurity, Andrew Baldwin and Simon Dalby
8. Superpower, Middle Power, or Satellite? Canadian Energy and Environmental Policy, Gordon Laxer
Part Three: Re-Examining Canada's Hard Power
9. The Revolution in Military Affairs and the Dilemma of the Canadian Armed Forces, Wilfried von Bredow
10. A Security Community-'If You Can Keep It': Societal Security, Demography, and the North American Zone of Peace, David G. Haglund
11. Canada's Response to Terrorism: Human Security at Home?, Kent Roach
12. Canada and the Atlantic Alliance in the post-Cold War Era: More NATO than NATO?, Ben Zyla and Joel J. Sokolsky
13. Canada's Arctic Policy: Transcending the Middle-Power Model?, Petra Dolata-Kreutzkamp
Conclusion
Index