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list price: $16.99
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
category: Political Science
published: Apr 2011
ISBN:9781552777312
publisher: James Lorimer & Company Ltd., Publishers
imprint: Lorimer

Rogue in Power

Why Stephen Harper is Remaking Canada by Stealth

by Christian Nadeau, translated by Robert Chodos; Hamovitch, Eric & Susan Joanis

tagged: presidents & heads of state, canadian
Description

Canada has always been known as a good place to live: a tolderant, prosperous, stable country that treats its citizens fairly and protects the weakest in society. Yet during the past seven years, it has started to change into a harder, more mean-spirited place. What is going on?

According to political scientist Christian Nadeau, this transformation is being engineered by Stephen Harper and the neo-con ideologues around him. The Conservatives have a clear agenda that they are implementing step by step. It is a well-planned and organized attack on justice and democracy as we have understood them to date.

Nadeau looks at how Harper and the Tories are systematically dismantling political, social, and cultural institutions--and with them, traditions and values--that many Canadians hold dear. He analyzes the wide range of actions and decisions that reflect this program: proroguing Parliament, appointing right-leaning judges, promoting a law-and-order agenda, trying to gut the gun registry, preventing the collection of impartial data through the Census, and shutting down social programs.

Rogue in Power is a compelling exploration of how Canada is being refashioned in broad daylight.

About the Authors

Christian Nadeau

CHRISTIAN NADEAU is a professor at Université de Montréal where he teaches philosophy and political ethics. He has published many articles and books, including Guerres justes et injustes and Justice et démocratie.

Robert Chodos

ROBERT CHODOS is an experienced author and translator who has published widely in the fields of Canadian business, politics, and transportation and of Quebec history. Among his most recent books are The Unmaking of Canada (1991), Lost in Cyberspace? (1997), and Paul Martin: A Political Biography (1998), all co-written with Rae Murphy and Eric Hamovitch, and all published by Lorimer.

Hamovitch, Eric

ERIC HAMOVITCH is a freelance writer based in Montreal.

Susan Joanis

Trained as a lawyer, SUSAN JOANIS has been involved in legal and policy work in the area of human rights and equality rights for over twenty-five years. She is also a writer, editor and translator.
Contributor Notes

CHRISTIAN NADEAU is a professor at Université de Montréal, where he teaches philosophy and political ethics. He has published many articles and books, including Republicanism: History, Theory, and Practice.

Editorial Reviews

"Nadeau does an admirable job of connecting the dots between conservative values and policies across a range of issue areas. He sheds light on a philosophically coherent agenda that has been hiding in plain sight. ...
Rogue in Power provides progressives with a very powerful analytical framework for monitoring the Harper government actions going forward. Combining it with an analysis of the interests connected to the Conservative project -- how they interact, reinforce each other, their cumulative impact -- will further deepen awareness and understanding, a necessary precondition to active resistance, which after all is Nadeau's ultimate purpose in writing the book."

— The Monitor

"It is clear that Nadeau believes critically thinking democrats will reject the impositional nature of Harpers social conservatism and join those who oppose the Conservative government....[the author reminds us to be cautious, to take a closer look at Stephen Harper and reflect on evidence of threats to our parliamentary democracy or policy changes that represent fundamental breaks from Canadian traditions. In this, [he does his readers a service."

— Socialist Studies

Nadeau's Rogue in Power is deeply unsettling on two counts. It demonstrates conclusively how effective Stephen Harper has been in capitalizing on political disaffection and in employing crude, undemocratic methods to nudge Canada in a conservative direction.

— The Chronicle Herald

"What distinguishes Nadeau from most of Harper's detractors is that he writes from the perspective of a politically engaged philosopher who wants to link his activism with the insights of his academic field."

— Montreal Review of Books

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