Le Ministère des Affaires extérieures du CanadaLe Ministère des Affaires extérieures du Canada
French
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Book, 1990-
Current format, Book, 1990-, , Available .Book, 1990-
Current format, Book, 1990-, , Available . Offered in 0 more formatsEn 1968, le minist re des Affaires ext rieures du Canada est en tat de si ge. Termin es les d cennies de croissance et de succ s diplomatiques de l'apr s-guerre. La technologie et la lib ralisation des changes annoncent une re de mondialisation. Devant les chocs p troliers et l'inflation galopante, l' conomie est en d sarroi. La mondialisation s'invite au programme des affaires internationales en y ajoutant de nouveaux dossiers: droits de la personne, notamment ceux des femmes, nergie, science et technologie, environnement, r volutions et terrorisme l' chelle mondiale. Le nouveau premier ministre, Pierre Trudeau, adh re cette mutation.
branl , le minist re peine d'abord r sister aux fortes pressions int rieures, politiques et conomiques. Pendant les ann es 1970, toutefois, il parvient peu peu retrouver sa pertinence. Il se concentre sur une diplomatie d'ordre conomique et invente des m canismes administratifs qui lui permettent de concilier une perspective naturellement ouverte sur le monde avec les pr occupations particuli res du gouvernement sur le front int rieur.
Chemin faisant, les Affaires ext rieures contribueront la formulation de politiques innovantes au regard des principaux enjeux de l' poque, notamment les missions de maintien de la paix des Nations Unies, la d colonisation, le dialogue Nord-Sud, le Moyen-Orient, la crise des otages en Iran et les dangers incessants de la Guerre froide.
Ce livre est publi en fran ais.
-
By 1968, Canada's storied Department of External Affairs was under siege. The postwar decades of steady growth and diplomatic accomplishment were over. Technological change and trade liberalization were ushering in a new era of globalization. The economy slumped and stagnated. Globalization stretched the international agenda, adding novel issues: human rights and woman's rights; energy, science, and technology; the environment; and global revolution and terrorism. The new Prime Minister, Pierre Trudeau, encouraged the Department of External Affairs to keep up with the times.
External Affairs initially reeled under the assault, struggling to respond to the enormous political, economic, and domestic pressures of the era. Through the 1970s, however, it steadily reclaimed its relevance. It focused more of its efforts on economic diplomacy and found the administrative mechanisms required to reconcile its traditional global outlook with the government's domestic preoccupations, finally merging with the Trade Commissioner Service in 1982.
Along the way, External Affairs helped craft innovative policies to respond to the dominant challenges of the era, including UN peacekeeping, decolonization and the North-South dialogue, the Middle East and the Iran Hostage crisis, and the ever-dangerous Cold War.
This book is published in French.
branl , le minist re peine d'abord r sister aux fortes pressions int rieures, politiques et conomiques. Pendant les ann es 1970, toutefois, il parvient peu peu retrouver sa pertinence. Il se concentre sur une diplomatie d'ordre conomique et invente des m canismes administratifs qui lui permettent de concilier une perspective naturellement ouverte sur le monde avec les pr occupations particuli res du gouvernement sur le front int rieur.
Chemin faisant, les Affaires ext rieures contribueront la formulation de politiques innovantes au regard des principaux enjeux de l' poque, notamment les missions de maintien de la paix des Nations Unies, la d colonisation, le dialogue Nord-Sud, le Moyen-Orient, la crise des otages en Iran et les dangers incessants de la Guerre froide.
Ce livre est publi en fran ais.
-
By 1968, Canada's storied Department of External Affairs was under siege. The postwar decades of steady growth and diplomatic accomplishment were over. Technological change and trade liberalization were ushering in a new era of globalization. The economy slumped and stagnated. Globalization stretched the international agenda, adding novel issues: human rights and woman's rights; energy, science, and technology; the environment; and global revolution and terrorism. The new Prime Minister, Pierre Trudeau, encouraged the Department of External Affairs to keep up with the times.
External Affairs initially reeled under the assault, struggling to respond to the enormous political, economic, and domestic pressures of the era. Through the 1970s, however, it steadily reclaimed its relevance. It focused more of its efforts on economic diplomacy and found the administrative mechanisms required to reconcile its traditional global outlook with the government's domestic preoccupations, finally merging with the Trade Commissioner Service in 1982.
Along the way, External Affairs helped craft innovative policies to respond to the dominant challenges of the era, including UN peacekeeping, decolonization and the North-South dialogue, the Middle East and the Iran Hostage crisis, and the ever-dangerous Cold War.
This book is published in French.
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- Québec : Les Presses de l'université Laval : Institute d'administration publique du Canada, [1990]-
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