Canada and the United Nations: By F. H. Soward and Edgar M[a]cInnis. With the assistance of Walter O'Hearn
In: (National studies on international organization)
2 results
Sort by:
In: (National studies on international organization)
Introduction, by M.A. Ormsby.--Frederic H. Soward and the development of international studies in Canada, by N.A.M. MacKenzie.--Politics, culture, and the writing of constitutions, by J. Conway.--Some thoughts on Canadian nationalism, by G.P. deT. Glazebrook.--Sir John A. Macdonald: the man, by P.B. White.--Mackenzie King and national unity, by H.B. Neatby.--Canada and the Pax Americana, by J.W. Holmes.--Antecedents and origins of the Canadian Institute of International Affairs, by E.D. Greathed.--Canadian and Australian self-interest, the American fact, and the development of the Commonwealth idea, by K.A. MacKirdy.--The Canadian Doctrine of the Middle Powers, by R.A. MacKay.--Collectivization, depression, and immigration, 1929-1930: a chance interplay, by H.L. Dyck.--Imperialism and free trade: Lancashire and India in the 1860s, by P. Harnetty.--The British East Africa High Commission: an imperial experiment, by J.B. Haynes.--Tribalism, nationalism, and patriotism in Nineteenth- and twentieth-century Africa, by J.B. Webster.--The Writings of Frederic H. Soward, by E. Mercer (p. [219]-228).