Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T06:10:57.976Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Trudeau Decade: Canadian-Latin American Relations 1968-1978

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

J.C.M. Ogelsby*
Affiliation:
Department of History, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada

Extract

Pierre Elliot Trudeau became leader of Canada's Liberal Party and Prime Minister of Canada in April 1968. Almost immediately he promised an effort to take new directions in Canada's external relations. One of the regions he focused attention on was Latin America (Dobell, 1972: 115).

That Trudeau was interested in Latin America appears natural for an intellectual raised in Quebec. There has long been a certain sympathy with the concept of latinité. French-Canadian intellectuals often believed that they had much in common with Latin Americans, because of their religions or cultural heritage, and felt a pull from that region even if they had never visited it. Trudeau had been editor of a leading Quebec journal, Cité Libre, and that journal occasionally had editorial comment on events in Latin America. Indeed, Trudeau established his position on political involvement in the Inter-American system in that journal and he has not wavered from that position since then (Octobre 1964; and his recent statement in International Canada, 1976).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1979

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

CALA (1977) Annual Report. Toronto: Canadian Association—Latin America.Google Scholar
Canada (1977a) “Canada's growing involvement in Latin America.” Mimeograph. 31 (August).Google Scholar
Canada (1977b) “Third meeting of Canada-Mexico joint ministerial committee November 21 and 22.” Ottawa: Department of External Affairs.Google Scholar
Canada (1976) Canada and Development Corporation, 1976-1977. Ottawa: Canadian International Development Agency.Google Scholar
Canada (1975) CIDA Annual Review, 1974-1975. Ottawa: Canadian International Development Agency.Google Scholar
Canada (1973) House of Commons Debates. 18 (September).Google Scholar
Canada (1971) “First Canada-Mexico ministerial meeting, Ottawa, October 21-22. Ottawa: Department of External Affairs.Google Scholar
Canada (1970) Latin America, Foreign Policy for Canadians. Ottawa: Information Canada.Google Scholar
Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (1969; 1978) Bulletin.Google Scholar
Cité Libre (1964) “Le Canada et l'OEA.” XV (Octobre): 2-3.Google Scholar
Dobell, P. (1972) Canada's Search for New Roles, Foreign Policy in the Trudeau Era. Toronto: Oxford.Google Scholar
Globe and Mail [Toronto] (1978) “Latin American gain linked to expansion of industrial nations.” (18 April): B2.Google Scholar
Guy, J. (1977) “The growing relationship of Canada and the Americas.” International Perspectives (July/August): 3-6.Google Scholar
Hanff, G. (1977) “Canadian foreign policy: a study of the government's decision to admit refugees from Chile.” M.A. thesis. Toronto: University of Toronto.Google Scholar
Harbron, J. (1976) “Canada draws closer to Latin America: a cautious involvement,” pp. 109142 in R. W. Fontaine and J. D. Theberge (eds.) Latin America's New Internationalism. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Harbron, J. (1963) Canada and the Organization of American States. Montreal: Private Planning Association.Google Scholar
Inter-American Development Bank (1978) IDB News (April).Google Scholar
International Canada (1976) (January): 1-4. Toronto: Canadian Institute of International Affairs.Google Scholar
International Journal (1978) “Trudeau and foreign policy.” XXXIII (Spring): 267-456.Google Scholar
Miller, E. (1948) “Canada and the Pan American Union.” International Journal (Winter): 24-38.Google Scholar
Ogelsby, J. (1976a) Gringos from the Far North: Essays in the History of Canadian Latin American Relations, 1866-1968. Toronto: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Ogelsby, J. (1976b) “Latin American studies in Canada, 1976.” CALA Review (April): 13-14.Google Scholar
Ogelsby, J. (1975) “Continuing U.S. influence on Canada-Cuba relations.” International Perspectives (September/October): 34-38.Google Scholar
Ogelsby, J. (1968) “Canada and the Pan American Union: twenty years on.” International Journal 24 (Summer): 571589.Google Scholar
Randall, S. J. (1977) “Canadian policy and the development of Latin America,” pp. 202229 in N. Hillmer and G. Stevenson (eds.) Foremost Nation, Canadian Foreign Policy and a Changing World. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.Google Scholar
Sharp, M. (1972) “Canada-U.S. relations: options for the future.” International Perspectives (Autumn).Google Scholar
Sokol, J. (1970) “Canada's missing the boat in the Dominican Republic.” Commentator (April): 10-11.Google Scholar
Solomon, H. (1973) “Another Canada-U.S. irritant?” Financial Post 9 (June): 10.Google Scholar
Thordarson, B. (1972) Trudeau and Foreign Policy, a Study in Decision-Making. Toronto: Oxford.Google Scholar