Whistling past the graveyard

Whistling past the graveyard1997
About this book
In this volume, David Thomas interprets Canada's ongoing constitutional crisis from a new and unusual perspective. Maintaining that 'constitutions conceal as well as reveal', he explores the notion of constitutional abeyances developed by British scholar Michael Foley. Canada's abeyances - deliberately murky areas of irresolution, unsettlement, and ambiguity - were long buried under the Constitution Act of 1867.
This Act avoided clear statements on many of the new country's most intractable issues, in particular, the status of Quebec. The author traces how and why an acceptable 'settled unsettlement' of this and other key abeyances lasted for almost a century. He analyses when, why, and how the abeyance of Quebec's status finally surfaced in the face of rising Quebec nationalism.
In the final chapter, Dr. Thomas contends that we can no longer 'whistle past the graveyard' by ignoring Quebec's nationalist aspirations. In our search for constitutional peace, we must tackle the 'mega-abeyance of duality'. The challenge resides in doing so while at the same time maintaining and revitalizing the wider Canadian federal system of which Quebec may yet remain a part.
Details
- First published
- 1997
- OL Work ID
- OL2123836W
Subjects
Constitutional historyFederal governmentPolitics and governmentNationalismAutonomy and independence movementsHistoryConstitutional history, canadaFederal government, canadaQuebec (province), politics and governmentQuebec (province), history, autonomy and independence movementsHistoire constitutionnelleFédéralismeNationalisme