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Unbridled Constraint: The Macdonald Commission Volumes on Canada and the International Political Economy*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2009

David G. Haglund
Affiliation:
Queen's University

Abstract

This article argues that the three volumes of the Macdonald Commission research output devoted to international political economy (vols. 28 to 30) demonstrate a bias toward what might be labeled “neo-realist” analysis. As a result, they nearly all are steeped in a degree of pessimism regarding Canada's place in the evolving international political economy—a pessimism that extends not only to future prospects for the. multilateral trading system, but for the bilateral Canada-US one as well. While this sense of limited options might indeed be justified, this article argues that a serious omission from the set of studies was the relative lack of attention accorded to the security arrangements underpinning the postwar trade and monetary order. That being said, the author finds that the volumes will likely have a lasting significance for scholars, even though their relevance for public policy may not be so great or lasting.

Résumé

Cet article soutient que les trois volumes des rapports de recherche (vols. 28 à 30) de la Commission Macdonald qui portent sur l'économie politique internationale révèlent une attachement, voire une prédisposition, pour un cadre analytique que l'on pourrait qualifier comme étant de type « néo-réaliste ». En conséquence, ils sont presque tous rédigés en fonction d'une vision pessimiste en ce qui a trait à la position du Canada au sein de l'économie politique internationale en évolution, un pessimisme d'ailleurs, qui se manifeste lorsque le cours futur du système des échanges multilatéraux aussi bien que celui des échanges bilatéraux entre le Canada et les États-Unis sont envisagés. Même en admettant qu'il se pourrait bien qu'une perspective qui agrée des options circonscrites soit justifiée, cet article soutient qu'une omission majeure de l'ensemble des études fût causée par le manque relatif d'attention accordée aux régimes de sécurité internationale qui soutiennent l'ordre commercial et monétaire de l'après-guerre. Ceci étant dit, l'auteur est d'avis que ces volumes constitueront probablement une ressource de valeur permanente pour les chercheurs, même si leur pertinence quant à l'élaboration des politiques gouvernementales pourrait ne pas s'avérer aussi importante ou durable.

Type
Field Analysis/Orientations de science politique
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association (l'Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique 1987

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References

1 For instances specific to Canada, see Axel Dorscht et al., “Canada's International Role and ‘Realism,’” International Perspectives, September/October 1986, 6–9; and Axel Dorscht and Gregg Legare, “Foreign Policy Debate and ‘Realism,’” International Perspectives, November/December 1986, 7–10. In a more general context, see the seminal contribution by Ashley, Richard K., “The Poverty of Neorealism,” International Organization 38 (1984), 225–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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