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         Canadian Political Parties:     more books (100)
  1. Canadian Public Policy: Globalization and Political Parties
  2. Some Differences in the Political Socialization Patterns of Canadian and American Party Officials: A Preliminary Report by Allan Kornberg and Joel Smith and David Bromley, 1969
  3. Canadian Public Policy: Globalization and Political Parties.(Book Review): An article from: American Review of Canadian Studies by Richard Nimijean, 1999-12-22
  4. Act of Faith : The Illustrated Chronicle of the Fastest-growing Political Movement in Canadian History, the Reform Party of Canada
  5. Political Ethics: A Canadian Perspective (Research Studies, V. 12)
  6. Some differences in the political socialization patterns of Canadian and American party officials: A preliminary report (Duke University. Center for Commonwealth Studies. Reprint series) by Allan Kornberg, 1969
  7. Youth in Canadian Politics: Participation and Involvement (Research Studies (Canada. Royal Commission on Electoral Reform and Party Financing), V. 8.)
  8. Pristine purity: new political parties in Canada.: An article from: American Review of Canadian Studies by Paul Lucardie, 2007-09-22
  9. Bibliographical Guide to Canadian Government and Politics 1968-1980: Section 5 : Political Parties and Elections (Public Administration Series--Bibliography) by Jan Gregor, 1986-05
  10. Media and Voters in Canadian Election Campaigns (Research Studies, V. 18)
  11. Canadian Bolsheviks: The Early Years of the Communist Party of Canada by Ian Angus, 2006-07-06
  12. Funding political parties: can a fair system be devised?: An article from: Canadian Parliamentary Review by David Payne, 1999-12-22
  13. Political Parties in Canada (McGraw-Hill Ryerson series in Canadian politics) by WINN, 1976-01-01
  14. Political Parties and Ideologies in Canada: Liberals, Conservatives, Socialists, Nationalists (Mcgraw-Hill Ryerson Series in Canadian Politics) by W. Christian, 1983-06

21. List Of Political Parties In Canada - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
(Redirected from List of canadian political parties) Political parties withrepresentation in the Canadian Parliament
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Canadian_political_parties
List of political parties in Canada
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from List of Canadian political parties Politics of Canada Politics of Canada
Political parties in Canada
Electoral districts

Elections in Canada

Summary
This article lists political parties in Canada
Contents

22. Canadian Parliament
including the home pages of canadian political parties. Identify whereyou would generally place the political parties on the political spectrum.
http://www.usask.ca/education/ideas/tplan/sslp/election.htm
CANADIAN PARLIAMENT
Don C. Barnett OBJECTIVES 1. Students will learn that Canada's parliament is composed of elected political parties. 2. Students will learn the concepts of "official party status", "majority-minority", "political spectrum", "constituency", "regionalism", and "popular vote". RELATED WEB SITES 1. Check the titles under the "Teaching Ideas" section Social Studies of this web site and click onto the title about women participating in Canadian society. This teaching plan contains ideas and statistics on the numbers of women in the federal House of Commons. PROCEDURES 1. Provide students with a brief introductory overview of Canada's federal electoral process. Review concepts such as the House of Commons, Senate, Constituencies, etc. Note that Members of Parliament (MP's) are elected to office. 2. Present students the following chart on the number of elected seats by political parties in the House of Commons. 3. Ask introductory questions such as: How many seats in the current House of Commons? Who is the MP for our constituency? How large is our constituency? Where is the general center of our constituency? 1997 House of Commons Political Party # of Seats % of Popular Vote Liberal 155 38 Reform 60 19 Bloc 44 11 NDP 21 11
Progressive Conservative 20 19 Independent 1 2 4. Ask students to analyze the information in the chart. Which party forms the "government"? Which party is the "official opposition"? Is it essential that everyone who runs for office must belong to a political party? (no there is one independent Member of Parliament).

23. WORLD - Canada
canadian political parties Partis politiques canadiens Politics and PoliticalParties in Canada - canadian political parties, with links to other
http://www.psa.ac.uk/www/canada.htm

24. Liberal Party, Canadian Political Party
Book review essay recent Canadian political history.(canadian political partiesHistorical Readings)(The Politics of Resentment British Columbia,
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0829666.html
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          google_ad_client = 'pub-1894504138907931'; google_ad_width = 120; google_ad_height = 240; google_ad_format = '120x240_as'; google_ad_type = 'text'; google_ad_channel =''; google_color_border = ['336699','B4D0DC','DFF2FD','B0E0E6']; google_color_bg = ['FFFFFF','ECF8FF','DFF2FD','FFFFFF']; google_color_link = ['0000FF','0000CC','0000CC','000000']; google_color_url = ['008000','008000','008000','336699']; google_color_text = ['000000','6F6F6F','000000','333333']; Encyclopedia Liberal party Liberal party, Canadian political party. Prior to confederation in 1867, reform parties advocating greater local participation in provincial governments, free trade, and increased separation of church and state existed in Canada West, Canada East, and the Maritime Provinces. After 1867 although the provincial reform parties dominated local politics in several provinces, they had problems establishing a viable national party. The only Liberal prime minister in the first three decades after Confederation was Alexander Mackenzie . The lack of a strong base in Quebec hampered national Liberal party efforts. However, opposition in Quebec to the execution of French-Canadian rebel Louis Riel, and the success of Wilfrid

25. Waterloo Public Library - Canadian Political Parties
canadian political parties. Links to the major political parties of Canada.The Liberal Party of Canada The Conservative Party of Canada (PC)
http://www.wpl.ca/site/collections/canadian_political.asp
@import "../../css/style_global.css"; @import "../../css/style_collections.css";

26. Canadian Political Parties@Everything2.com
There are also the Canadian Provincial Political Parties which often mimic the One of the more peculiar thing about canadian political parties is their
http://everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=164354

27. Youth Participation In Canadian Political Parties
Less than 3 per cent of Canadian political party members are 25 or younger.The average age of a party member in Canada is 59.
http://www.ucalgary.ca/~ptyyouth/
Examining the Contours of Youth Participation in Canadian Political Parties
Researchers: William Cross, Mount Allison University; Lisa Young, University of Calgary. The goal of this project is to understand more fully the political participation of young Canadians. Young Canadians are less active in traditional politics than previous generations. This is concerning because there are reasons to expect that this low-level participation will continue even as Canadian youth age out of the 18 to 24 cohort. Less than 3 per cent of Canadian political party members are 25 or younger. The average age of a party member in Canada is 59. In understanding political parties’ recruitment practices and incentives, and the experience of Canadian youth in parties, we can begin to understand why some youth join parties while many other engaged youth do not. We are also interested in knowing if those youth who belong to parties are satisfied with their participation and opportunities afforded them. Political parties occupy a crucial role in Canadian democracy. They are privileged by their central role in elections and in Parliament, and as Canadian youth are tuned-out of party politics, the relationship between youth and parties presents a compelling case. The first stage of the project is a comprehensive study of youth party members. We have interviewed youth and party elites, 5000 youth party members, and will soon conduct focus groups with youth party members and politically engaged youth who do not belong to parties. The results of the youth party member survey can be found on the

28. Canadian Democratic Movement Putting Canadians First
Category Start / canadian political parties Links to canadian political parties.Links also available in canadian political parties subcategories
http://www.canadiandemocraticmovement.ca/CmodsWebLinks-index-req-viewlink-cid-17

29. Dept Of Political Science - Faculty & Research Interests
Canadian Politics; canadian political parties/Social Movements; Comparative PoliticalParties/Social Movements; Representational Strategies
http://www.arts.smu.ca/politicalScience/research.aspx
@import url( /StyleSheets/Main.css ); If you can see read this, you are using a non-standards compliant browser. You will however be able to view all of this page's content, however the intended layout will be lost. You may download a standards compliant browser at: or http://www.microsoft.com/windows/ie/downloads/default.asp menuSectionIDArray[menuSectionIDArray.length] = 27; Political Science Home What is Political Science Faculty ... Glossary menuSectionIDArray[menuSectionIDArray.length] = 1; Arts Main Arts Home Contact Information FAQ ...
Download Faculty Office Hours
Faculty Research Interests and Courses Taught
Name
Research Interests
Courses
Taught
Dr. Alexandra Dobrowolsky Associate Professor, B.A. Hons (Queen's/ University of Toronto), M.A. (Dalhousie), PhD (Carleton) adobrowolsky@smu.ca
  • Canadian politics, policy
  • Democratic theory
  • Representational forms: parties, interest groups and social movements
  • Women and politics
  • Women and public policy Canadian Politics
  • Canadian Political Parties/Social Movements
  • Comparative Political Parties/Social Movements
  • Representational Strategies
  • Women and Politics
  • Women and Public Policy
Dr. Marc Doucet

30. Michael Geist - Canadian Political Parties Divided On Tech Law Policy
MichaelGeists Home on the Web, canadian political parties Divided on Tech Law Policy.
http://www.michaelgeist.ca/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=592&Itemid=

31. The Rise Of Plebiscitary Democracy In Canadian Political Parties -- Young And Cr
The Contours of Political Party Membership in Canada Party Politics, July 1,2004; 10(4) 427 444. Abstract PDF
http://ppq.sagepub.com/cgi/content/short/8/6/673

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Party Politics, Vol. 8, No. 6, 673-699 (2002)
This Article Full Text (PDF) Alert me when this article is cited Alert me if a correction is posted Services Similar articles in this journal Alert me to new issues of the journal Download to citation manager Cited by other online articles
the Rise of Plebiscitary Democracy in Canadian Political Parties
Lisa Young University of Calgary, Canada William Cross Mount Allison University, Canada In this article we trace the development of intra-party democracy within Canadian political parties and argue that a new, plebiscitary model of intra-party democracy is shaping internal party organization. This is evidenced by changing party practices, which are for the most part supported by grassroots party members. Data from a survey of members of the five major political parties demonstrate this support for plebiscitary democracy, and suggest that conflicts surrounding plebiscitary democracy shape party activists' structure of opinion on matters of internal party organization. This support

32. Canadian Political Parties And Elections
type canada AND (political parties) both under Subject Field AND (policy or (note broaden keywords to canada and (political parties) if original
http://www.westmount.ci.yrdsb.edu.on.ca/polt-parties.html
Westmount Collegiate Institute Suite 103 - 1000 New Westminster Dr. Thornhill, ON L4J 8G3 Tel: (905) 882-0277 Fax: (905) 882-2450 return to homepage
CANADIAN POLITICAL PARTIES
AND ELECTIONS
STARTER SITES
Federal Political Parties in Canada
Political Parties in Canada

Canadian Political Parties Links

Canada's Political Portal - Federal Political Parties
... Canadian Political Parties - Federal Provincial Municipal
ENCYCLOPEDIAS
Encyclopedias Page
See also:
Encyclopedias on CD-ROM (in-house)
Encyclopedias In-house
Magazines and Newspaper Archives and Indexes: some sources are password protected and require newer browsers 4.0 or higher
Note in: For WCI Ebscohost:
type keyword(s) under Subject field and/or in Default Field as the mix requires: eg./ type

33. The Canadian Democratic Audit
He has published widely on the subject of political parties and and his recentbooks include canadian political parties in the Constituencies .
http://www.canadiandemocraticaudit.ca/over.html
CANADIAN DEMOCRATIC AUDIT OVERVIEW
HOME
BROCHURE POSTER The Audit Team ...
Audit Overview in English
(*PDF) Audit Overview in French (*PDF) The Audit Team Dr. Darin Barney is Assistant Professor of Communication at McGill University. He is author of Prometheus Wired: The Hope for Democracy in the Age of Network Technology. He was the 2003 recipient of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada's Aurora Prize for outstanding contribution to Canadian intellectual life by a new researcher. In 2004, he was selected as one of 15 “Leaders of Tomorrow” by the Partnership Group for Science and Engineering. To Vote or Not to Vote? The Merits and Limits of Rational Choice Theory. Dr. R. Kenneth Carty is Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of British Columbia and a past President of the Canadian Political Science Association. He has published widely on the subject of political parties and electoral organization and his recent books include Canadian Political Parties in the Constituencies . Dr. Carty is Chair of the Board of Governors of the Vancouver School of Theology. John C. Courtney

34. Hillwatch.com: Political Party Election Sites: Strategic Assets Or Virtual Lawn
canadian political parties and candidates have an awful lot to do in the future if It is ironic canadian political parties talk about the importance of
http://www.hillwatch.com/print/Media/New_Release_June_22.aspx
Back to Web View Today Political Party Election Sites: Strategic Assets or Virtual Lawn Signs? Canadian Politics has a ways to go! NEWS RELEASE TRANSMITTED BY CCNMatthews
"Canadian political web sites are more like lawn signs than campaign assets. Canadian political parties and candidates have an awful lot to do in the future if they hope to use technology to electoral advantage and catch up to the Americans in the process." says Hillwatch e-services Principal Alex Langshur.
Over the past 4 weeks, Hillwatch did an exhaustive comparative benchmarking of the five main political party sites in Canada, as well as the George Bush and John Kerry sites. The conclusions are clear:
  • Canadian political websites lag U.S. sites on most critical best practice indicators. US sites are more than twice as content-rich as Canadian sites. Canadian party sites reflect a top-down command and control campaign model that gives little scope to organize the grassroots and target core communities. Canadian sites resemble electronic lawn signs – they inform but don’t engage. They rarely take the next step of providing multiple, clear and quick ‘calls to action’ that turn visitors into supporters.

35. Western Libraries - The D. B. Weldon Library
This is a list of major canadian political parties (federal and provincial). This is not a comprehensive list of all political parties in Canada.
http://www.lib.uwo.ca/weldon/collections/govpubs/pol-parties.shtml
Text Only Version Skip to Navigation Skip to Content Access Keys Quick Links..... Resources by Subject Databases by Title Film Services Interlibrary Loans RefWorks Teaching Support UWO E-mail WebCT
Canadian Political Parties
This is a list of major Canadian political parties (federal and provincial). The centre column indicates the code number for material housed in the Government Publications collection. This is the place to look if you want historical material produced by the party such as platforms from past elections or constitutions as well as task force and caucus committee reports. Simply do a Call Number search in the Library Catalogue using the code from this page and you will bring up a list of that party's publications. If you click on the link in the right-hand column you will be taken to the website for the party. Be aware that the "name" of the party in the left-hand column is not necessarily the full or official name of the party. This is not a comprehensive list of all political parties in Canada. For a more exhaustive list go to Canadian Politics, Elections and Political Parties at http://www.library.ubc.ca/poli/cpwebpr.htm

36. Party Politics Vol. 8, Issue 6, P. 673
of Plebiscitary Democracy in canadian political parties, Party Politics, These trends create clear dilemmas for political parties, as they make it
http://www.partypolitics.org/volume08/v08i6p673.htm
Return to: Search Page or to: Table of Contents Vol. 8, issue 6 Lisa Young and William Cross, "The Rise of Plebiscitary Democracy in Canadian Political Parties," Party Politics, 8 (November, 2002), 673-699. First Paragraph:
Figures and Tables:
Figure 1. Influence Differentials
Table 1. Factor analysis. Intra-party democracy: factor analysis (principal components, varimax rotation, missing values replaced by mean)
Table 2. Best way to elect a party leader
Table 3. Mean factor scores, factor 1 (support for undifferentiated membership)
Table 4. Mean factor scores, factor 4 (deference to party elites on policy development)
Table 5. Mean factor scores, factor 2 (dissatisfaction with extent of grassroots influence)
Table 6. Percent of respondents indicating that the following is 'very important' in developing party policy
Table 7. Mean factor scores, factor 3 (opposition to leader appointment)
Table 8. Mean factor scores, factor 5 (support for intra-party egalitarianism)

37. Canadian Political Parties On DPRK-Canada Relations
On May 27, 2004, KFA(C) polled canadian political parties regarding their viewson CanadaDPRK relations and peace on the Korean peninsula.
http://www.korea-dpr.com/users/canada/election.htm
Canadian Political Parties on DPRK-Canada Relations Back to KFA(C) Homepage On May 27, 2004, KFA(C) polled Canadian political parties regarding their views on Canada-DPRK relations and peace on the Korean peninsula. Parties have been given until June 14 to respond, although we will post any responses received after this date. While the Liberal Party of Canada, currently the governing party, did respond to our request, they did not follow the format of the questionnaire. Therefore, their response may be found separate from others. Communist Party of Canada/Marxist-Leninist Party of Canada 1. In 2000, Canada officially recognized the government of the DPRK. On February 6, 2001, the governments of Canada and the DPRK established diplomatic relations. However, it is Canada's embassy in China that is responsible for providing all consular services to the DPRK, and the Department of Foreign Affairs admits that this limits Canadian diplomats' ability to interact with their North Korean counterparts. Do you support opening a Canadian embassy in Pyongyang, the DPRK's capital? Communist Party : Yes, we strongly favour developing full diplomatic relations between our two countries, including opening up respective embassies in Pyongyang and Ottawa. We strongly welcomed the long-overdue establishment of bilateral diplomatic relations in 2001. Unfortunately, no sooner had such a positive development occurred than the Canadian government began to downplay this achievement, presumably under pressure from Washington over the so-called 'nuclear issue'.

38. Log Cabin Chronicles Tim Belford's Canadian Political Parties Column
Features, fiction, poetry, opinion, photography, art, and downhome cooking fromthe culturally rich Anglo, French, Yankee communities in the Lake
http://www.tomifobia.com/belford/canadian_politics.shtml
SEPTEMBER 2005 LOG CABIN CHRONICLES UPDATED DAILY Tim Belford: Short Takes On Life
Tim Belford
Tim Belford is host of Quebec A.M. CBC Radio's popular English- language morning show (91.7 FM, 6-9, Mon.-Fri). He also is said to know a thing or three about wine. ARCHIVED COLUMNS Posted 08.14.02
Quebec City TIM BELFORD
Canada's political parties: all you ever wanted to know and then some
It struck me the other day, now that we're picking new leaders for two of the federal political parties, it might be a good time to sort out the New Age political spectrum. Not only will the Tories and the NDP soon have new hands on the helm but the Canadian Alliance already has a new person in charge. You know, good old what's-his-name. The Liberals, meanwhile, are somewhere in the middle of act one of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar and when the knives are all accounted for, they'll likely have a new chief as well. Anyway, back to the political spectrum. A lot of us seem to have become confused over what is left and right anymore. It's understandable.

39. Environmental Report Card For Canadian Political Parties
Greenpeace asked the main canadian political parties to answer 7 questions relevantto people who want to vote for a green and peaceful Canada,
http://sillytech.com/threads/876
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40. UW Politics - Canadian Government
Links to canadian political parties, politicians for both federal and provincialjuristictions; Politics Watch Canada s Political Portal - Political news
http://www.uwinnipeg.ca/academic/as/polsci/canada.html
CANADIAN
GOVERNMENT

General Government Information
The Canadian Federal Government
The Canada Site is a one-stop site for Government of Canada programs, services, initiatives and government institutions. It provides quick access to all federal government departments and agencies, access to provincial and territorial government sites, information on parliamentarians past and present, includes an extensive FAQ service, provides details about the history of Canada, as well as basic public service information including addresses of Canadian embassies around the world, publications of the government of Canada (including electronic Hansard, Auditor General's Reports, etc.). See below for more sites.
  • A link to the official homepages of all the Canadian Provincial and Territorial Governments

  • Parliamentary Internet
    The Parliamentary Internet provides access to the official publications of Parliament, and general, non-partisan information about the role, history, proceedings and activities of the Senate, House of Commons, and Library of Parliament
  • Glossary of Parliamentary Procedure House of Commons Canada The purpose of this glossary is to provide a convenient format to explain Canadian technical terminology employed in the proceedings of the House of Commons National Library of Canada [http://www.nlc-bnc.ca/cangov/egovinfo.htm] - The 'Canadian Government Information' site at the National Library of Canada, is a collection of links to other sites that provide significant information about federal and provincial governments. It provides access to key government documents (look for the Canada Gazette), as well as the many services provided by the National Library (see the 'Guide to Canadian Political Science Resource,' prepared by National Library staff) including the 'Weekly Checklist' of government publications. An extremely useful site, provided by trained professional librarians
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