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Executive Styles in Canada: Cabinet Structures and Leadership Practices in Canadian Government

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Executive Styles in Canada: Cabinet Structures and Leadership Practices in Canadian Government
IPAC Series in Public Management and Governance

Edited by Luc Bernier, Keith Brownsey, and Michael Howlett
University of Toronto Press © 2005

Cloth: May 5 2005 Active/Available
Paper: Apr 30 2005 Active/Available

World Rights
320pp /8 figures, 1 table
Volume


Canada?s political regime is centred on the existence of a federal system of government within the institutions of Westminster parliamentary democracy. This system places a great deal of political power in the hands of cabinet ministers, and while cabinet systems of government in Canada have evolved at different speeds in different federal and provincial governments, they have, over the last two decades, increased centralization of administrative and legislative control in ever fewer hands.

This shift has been well demonstrated by scholars such as Donald J. Savoie regarding the federal system, but little examined in the context of provincial governance. Executive Styles in Canada places equal emphasis on both levels, explaining how and in what way cabinet systems have conformed to or diverged from this general pattern. This unique collection is the only systematic, cross-provincial study of its kind, and is certain to be of great benefit to anyone interested in the structure of government in Canada.

Luc Bernier is the directeur de l?enseignement et de la recherche at l?École nationale d?administration publique.

Keith Brownsey is a professor in the Department of Policy Studies at Mount Royal College.

Michael Howlett is a professor in the Department of Political Science at Simon Fraser University.





University of Toronto Press acknowledges the financial support for its publishing activities of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP).

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