Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 November 2014
Although most of this essay relates to the work of political scientists, some of it deals with the writings of others who have contributed to our understanding of the government and politics of Canada. It would be a perverse and superficial student of our political institutions indeed who confined himself to the scholarship of political scientists without familiarizing himself at least in a general way with the writings, for example, of historians Ramsay Cook and W. L. Morton, sociologists S. D. Clark and John Porter, economists John Dales and Harry Johnson, legal scholars Edward McWhinney and Frank Scott, and, outside the bounds of Academia proper, journalists Peter Newman and Claude Ryan, and practising public administrators A. W. Johnson and Herbert Balls.
An earlier version of this essay was read to a joint meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association and the Canadian Economics Association in Ottawa in June 1967.
1 Particularly W. A. Mackintosh, The Economic Background of Dominion-Provincial Relations, J. A. Carry Difficulties of Divided Jurisdiction, and Donald Creighton, British North America at Confederation.
2 Clokie, H. McD., Canadian Government and Politics (Toronto, 1944)Google Scholar, and Dawson, R. MacGregor, The Government of Canada (Toronto, 1947).Google Scholar
3 (Toronto, 1963), viii.
4 Voting in Canada (Toronto, 1967).Google Scholar
5 In particular, so far as public agencies are concerned, the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism, the Ontario Advisory Committee on Confederation, and the federal Committee on Election Expenses.
6 Scarrow, Howard A. “Patterns of Voter Turnout in Canada,” in Courtney, , ed., Voting in Canada, 108–10.Google Scholar
7 Grossman, Lawrence S. “‘Safe’ Seats: The Rural-Urban Pattern in Ontario,” this Journal, XXIX, No. 3 (08 1963), 367–71Google Scholar; reprinted in Courtney, , ed., Voting in Canada, 99–103.Google Scholar
8 Davis, Morris, “Did They Vote for Candidate or Party in Halifax?” in Meisel, John, ed., Papers on the 1962 Election (Toronto, 1964), 19–32 Google Scholar and “Ballot Behaviour in Halifax Revisited,” this Journal, XXX, No. 4 (11 1964), 538–58Google Scholar, reprinted in Courtney, , ed., Voting in Canada, 130–42.Google Scholar
9 Scarrow, Howard A. “Federal-Provincial Voting Patterns in Canada,” in Courtney, , ed., Voting in Canada, 82–9.Google Scholar
10 Canada Votes: A Handbook of Federal and Provincial Election Data (New Orleans, 1962).Google Scholar
11 The Canadian General Election of 1957 (Toronto, 1962).Google Scholar
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13 Eglinton (Toronto, 1965).Google Scholar
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15 Voting in the 1960 Federal By-Elections at Peterborough and Niagara Falls: Who Voted New Party and Why?” ibid., XXVIII, No. 1 (Feb. 1962), 35–53.
16 Voting in a Provincial General Election and a Federal By-Election: A Constituency Study of Saskatoon City.” ibid., XXXII, no. 3 (Aug. 1966), 338–53.
17 “A Study of One Constituency in the Canadian Federal Election of 1957,” ibid., XXIV, no. 2 (May 1958), 230–40.
18 “The Peterborough Election: The Success of a Party Image,” Dalhousie Review (Winter 1960–1961), 505–19.Google Scholar
19 Irving, John A.,The Social Credit Movement in Alberta (Toronto, 1959)Google Scholar, and Macpherson, C. B., Democracy in Alberta (Toronto, 1953).Google Scholar
20 The Union Nationale: A Study in Quebec Nationalism (Toronto, 1963).Google Scholar
21 The Conservative Party of Canada (Durham, NC, 1959).Google Scholar
22 The Progressive Party in Canada (Toronto, 1950).Google Scholar
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24 Party and Society (Chicago, 1963).Google Scholar
25 The Diefenbaker Interlude: Parties and Voting in Canada (Toronto, 1965).Google Scholar
26 Report of the Committee on Election Expenses, and Studies in Canadian Party Finance (Ottawa, 1966).Google Scholar
27 And reprinted, edited and with an introduction by Underhill, Frank H., in Carleton Library series (Toronto, 1966).Google Scholar
28 “The Social and Political Ideas of French-Canadian Nationalists 1920–1945.”
29 Politics in New Brunswick (Toronto, 1961).Google Scholar
30 Le Bell 60 et le public, les Cahiers de l'Institut Canadien d'Education des Adultes (Montreal, 1966).Google Scholar
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32 Du Duplessisme au Johnsonisme (Montreal, 1967).Google Scholar
33 “Les dimensions sociologiques du vote oréditiste au Québec,” Recherches sociographiques, 1965.Google Scholar
34 “Political Factors in the Rise of Social Credit in Quebec,” Address to the Annual Meeting of the CPSA, Charlottetown, 1964.Google Scholar
35 “Conservatism, Liberalism, and Socialism in Canada,” this Journal, XXXII, no. 2 (05 1996), 143–71.Google Scholar
36 The Vertical Mosaic (Toronto, 1966).Google Scholar
37 “The Formulation of Liberal and Conservative Programmes in the 1965 Canadian Election,” this Journal, XXVI, no. 4 (11 1960), 565–74.Google Scholar
38 The Diefenbaker Interlude.
39 “The Two Themes of Canadian Federalism,” this Journal, XXXI, no. 1 (02 1965), 80–97.Google Scholar
40 The Changing Conditions of Politics, Alan B. Plaunt Memorial Lectures (Toronto, 1963), 25.Google Scholar
41 Canada's Immigration Policy: A Critique (Toronto, 1957).Google Scholar
42 Canadian Anti-Combines Legisfotion (Toronto, 1963).Google Scholar
43 “Public Policy and Regional Development: The Experience of the Atlantic Provinces,” in Rotstein, Abraham, ed., Prospects for Change, University League for Social Reform (Toronto, 1965), 102–48.Google Scholar
44 In Defence of Canada, I and II (Toronto, 1964 and 1966).Google Scholar
45 “The Public Corporation in Canada,” in Freidmann, W., ed., The Public Corporation (Toronto, 1954), 57–92.Google Scholar
46 “The Role of Royal Commissions in Canadian Government,” Proceedings of Third Annual Conference of the Institute of Public Administration of Canada (Toronto, 1951), 351-67.Google Scholar
47 The Public Purse: A Study in Canadian Democracy (Toronto, 1962).Google Scholar
48 The Ombudsman: Citizens Defender (Toronto, 1965)Google Scholar and “An Ombudsman Scheme for Canada,” this Journal, XXVIII, no. 4 (11 1962), 543–56.Google Scholar
49 Conditional Grants and Canadian Federalism, Canadian Tax Foundation (Toronto 1963).Google Scholar
50 “Politics and Policy Making in Metropolitan Toronto,” this Journal, XXXI, no. 4 (11 1965), 538–51.Google Scholar
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52 The Unreformed Senate of Canada (Rev. ed.), (Toronto, 1963).Google Scholar
53 The Modern Senate of Canada, 1923–1963, A Re-appraisal (Toronto, 1965).Google Scholar
54 Procedure in the Canadian House of Commons (Toronto, 1962).Google Scholar
55 Thorburn, Politics in New Brunswick; Beck, J. M., The Government of Nova Scotia (Toronto 1957)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; MacKinnon, F., The Government of Prince Edward Island (Toronto, 1951)Google Scholar; Donnelly, M. S., The Government of Manitoba (Toronto, 1963).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
56 The Office of Lieutenant-Governor, Toronto, 1957.Google Scholar
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58 Zakuta, A Protest Movement Becalmed.
59 Morton, The Progressive Party in Canada.
60 Irving, The Social Credit Movement in Alberta, and Macpherson, Democracy in Alberta.
61 Williams, The Conservative Party of Canada.
62 Framework for Political Analysis (Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1965), 22.Google Scholar
63 “Regional Interests and Policy in a Federal Structure,” this Journal, XXXII, no. 1 (02 1966), 3–14.Google Scholar
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65 (Toronto, 1966).