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Title: UNI320Y: Canadian Questions: Issues and Debates


1
UNI320Y Canadian Questions Issues and Debates
  • Week 12 Transnational Citizenship
  • Professor Emily Gilbert
  • http//individual.utoronto.ca/emilygilbert/

2
Transnational Citizenship
  1. A North American Community?
  2. Transnational Politics and Citizenship
  3. Conclusions

3
I A North American Community?
  • Jennifer Welsh
  • Professor of International Relations, Oxford
    University
  • Born Regina, Saskatchewan
  • Metis background
  • B.A. from University of Saskatchewan then Rhodes
    Scholar at Oxford, where she received MA and PhD
  • Consultant to Paul Martin government on new
    foreign policy

4
  • We should conceive of Canada not in traditional
    terms, as a middle power, but as a citizen in the
    world of nation-states. In fact, I believe Canada
    has the potential to be a model citizen for the
    21st century

5
  • Can compare North America to Europe?
  • European citizenship
  • 1970s idea for common European identity
  • 1976 elections in European Parliament
  • 1981 move to uniform passport
  • 1984-1992 shift to common market
  • 1992 Maastricht Treaty European Union
  • 1992
  • Address common identity and democratic deficit
  • 1997 Treaty of Amsterdam
  • 2004 Constitution (rejected in French and Dutch
    referenda 2005)

6
  • Cant compare NA to Europe
  • Asymmetry of power
  • US exceptionalism
  • No North American grand purpose
  • But can take two lessons from Europe
  • European citizenship did not require strong or
    unified European identity
  • Economic market making leads to strong pressures
    for democraticization

7
  • Is a NA community viable?
  • Significant cross-border co-operation
  • Limited provisions for public participation or
    citizenship
  • But vague sense of shared norms and purposes
  • Little aspiration for political union or citizen
    equality across the region

8
  • Some interest from Mexico
  • More open cross-border mobility
  • Some interest from Canada
  • Strengthen economic relationship with US
  • But Canadian perspective more Can-global
  • As world citizens civil society activism
  • US Post 9/11 protectionism
  • Homeland security and defense
  • Concerns regarding population mobility

9
  • Should consider how to ensure more legitimacy in
    NAFTA
  • More transparency and options for public
    participation
  • Enhance rule of law in North America
  • But what about NAFTA-plus a new big idea
  • Customs union
  • Common market
  • Currency union

10
Security and Prosperity Partnership of North
America
  • Signed March 23, 2005
  • Interest in regional cooperation
  • and concerns about global
  • competition
  • Aims are
  • to make region safe and secure
  • to ensure businesses are competitive, economies
    are resilient
  • to ameliorate quality of life

11
  • Expands on earlier bilateral and trilateral
    agreements
  • Economic cooperation eg autos
  • Harmonization of external tariffs
  • Regulatory cooperation eg energy
  • Pre-clearance programs and biometrics

12
  • Report to Leaders, June 2005had 90 days to
    report on their progress on
  • Prosperity
  • Electronic commerce
  • Liberalization of rules of origin
  • Commercial products re public health and safety
  • Textiles and apparel labelling
  • Temporary worker entry, for professionals
  • Migratory species and biodiversity
  • Harmonized approach to BSE
  • Border flow analysis
  • Aviation safety
  • Airspace capacity
  • Harmonized air navigation systems

13
  • Security
  • NTC-NRAC exchange
  • Public safety along US-Mexico border
  • Progress on Windsor-Detroit 25 challenge
  • Expanding infrastructure at Nogales, Arizona
  • Science and technology cooperation
  • Nexus marine pilot
  • Pre-clearance site at Thousand Islands Bridge
  • WCO framework
  • Joint initial verification team examinations
  • Port security exercises

14
  • SPP also includes quality of life issues
  • The environment, eg clean air and water
  • Education, especially higher education
  • Science and technology, eg innovation
  • Health, eg Aboriginal peoples
  • Appeals to citizens or the people being
    protected, responded to, invested in, their
    full potential promoted
  • Rationalized in terms of a shared belief in
    freedom, economic opportunity, and strong
    democratic values and institutions

15
  • Our Partnership will accomplish these objectives
    through a trilateral effort to increase the
    security, prosperity, and quality of life of our
    citizens. This work will be based on the
    principle that our security and prosperity are
    mutually dependent and complementary, and will
    reflect our shared belief in freedom, economic
    opportunity, and strong democratic values and
    institutions. Also, it will help consolidate our
    action into a North American framework to
    confront security and economic challenges, and
    promote the full potential of our people,
    addressing disparities and increasing
    opportunities for all (SPP 1)

16
  • SPP and development of marginal populations
  • In the long run, healthier indigenous
    communities will be able to more fully
    participate in the social, economic, and cultural
    life of North America (Annex to the SPP)
  • Improvements in human capital and physical
    infrastructure in Mexico, particularly in the
    center and south of the country, would knit these
    regions more firmly into the North American
    economy and are in the economic and security
    interests of all three countries (Independent
    Task Force on the Future of North America)

17
  • SPP draws together sovereigntydisciplinegovernm
    ent (Foucault) at the trilateral level
  • the defense and security of the population
  • the regulation and disciplining of subjects into
    citizens
  • the optimization of subjects by governing life
    and the economy
  • Concerns that
  • Provides no mechanisms for shared governance
  • Consultative only with business community North
    American Competitiveness Council
  • No discussion of trilateral citizenship
    representation, accountability, transparency

18
  • "Continental Prosperity in the New
  • Security Environment
  • Fairmont Banff Springs
  • Hotel, Sept 12-14, 2006

19
  • Co-chaired by
  • George Shultz, former Secretary of State to
    President Ronald Reagan
  • Dr. Pedro Aspe, former Secretary of Finance to
    President Carlos Salinas
  • Hon. Peter Lougheed, former Premier of Alberta
  • Keynote address by Defense Secretary Donald 
    Rumsfeld on military to military cooperation
  • Other participants include
  • Mr. Thomas dAquino, Canadian Council of Chief
    Executives
  • Dr. Wendy Dobson The Institute for International
    Business
  • Hon. John P. Manley,  McCarthy, Tetrault LLP
  • Dr. Robert A. Pastor, Director, Center for North
    American Studies, American University,
    Washington, DC
  • Emb Andrés Rozental (Mexican Coordinator),
    Mexican Council on Foreign Relations
  • Tim Keating, US NorthCom Admiral and NATO
    commander
  • General Rick Hellier, Chief of Defense Staff
  • Representatives from Lockheed Martin, Chevron,
    Mexico's PEMEX, Suncor Energy 

20
  • Working behind the scenes
  • on infrastructure, regulatory
  • frameworks evolution by stealth
  • Canada to host June 2007 meeting in Kananaskis

21
II Transnational Politics and Citizenship
  • Peter Jay Smith
  • Professor of Political Science, Athabasca
    University (AB)
  • BA (University of Portland, Oregon) MA
    (McMaster) PhD (Carleton)

22
  • Information and communication technologies (ICTs)
  • New forms of expression and connection among
    people
  • Creating new public spaces
  • Contesting globalization
  • Anti-MAI, -WTO, -IMF activism

23
  • Economic globalization
  • Challenges Westphalian state model
  • Challenges assumption that politics and
    citizenship only possible within the state
  • Alongside challenges to state-centric Canadian
    citizenship
  • Quebec nationalism
  • Aboriginal claims
  • Social movement activism
  • 1960s and rise of non-traditional forms of
    participation
  • Shift from democratic citizenship (participation,
    shaping decisions) to consumer citizenship
    (self-interested, atomistic consumers of
    government services)

24
Rethinking public space
  • Hannah Arendt on combative politics
  • Association and contestation
  • Site of struggle
  • Political realm emerges out of sharing of words
    and deeds
  • Public and private always contested, negotiated
  • The polis, properly speaking, is not the
    city-state in its physical location, it is the
    organization of the people as it arises out of
    acting and speaking together for this purpose, no
    matter where they happen to be (Arendt)

25
  • Internet
  • Promotes interactivity
  • Is open and flexible
  • Horizontal links control of information in hands
    of more people
  • Rise of alternative public spaces
  • But biased and exclusive?

26
  • Multilateral Agreement on Investment
  • Discussions originated in 1995 to
  • 1) broad multilateral framework for investment
  • 2) further trade liberalization
  • 3) effective dispute settlement mechanism
  • 4) open to OECD members first, then others
  • Draft text leaked February 1997
  • Public Citizen and Polaris
  • Web mobilization 400 web sites
  • France withdraws Oct 1998, discussions end Dec
    1998
  • Importance of internet mobilization

27
  • Internet used to facilitate debate
  • Co-ordinate global campaign
  • Provide draft faxes and open letters
  • To share press releases
  • Make public information
  • Used alongside traditional lobbying methods

28
  • Millennium Round of WTO negotiations
  • All participants make use of the Internet
  • Sept 1998 MIT Sergio Marchi invites public
    discussion on WTO extensive consultations ensue
  • Sept 1998 Council of Canadians begins
    cross-country tour
  • Feb 1999 DFAIT establishes own web-site then
    consultations with business, public
  • Summer 1999 40 Canadian NGOs sign on-line Civil
    Society Declaration (1,100 organizations from 87
    countries)

29
  • Government On Line (GOL) initiative (1999)
  • Citizen on-line service delivery to brand
    Canada
  • DFAIT doubles IT budget to 100 million
    (1999/2000)
  • Biggest department is Information Management and
    Technology Bureau
  • Implements MITNET (multi-user International
    Telecommunications Network)

30
  • Dialogue on Foreign Policy (DFP)
  • Launched January 2003
  • To discuss Canadas place in the world
  • Includes relationship with US and 3 foreign
    policy pillars 1) security, 2) prosperity and 3)
    values and culture
  • MFA Bill Graham public input and partnerships
    are central to the process
  • Includes
  • Town hall meetings
  • Expert roundtables
  • Electronic discussions on dedicated website

31
  • Internet offers potential to have more direct
    representation
  • importance alongside declining interest in formal
    politics
  • But problems with ICTS
  • Quality of information uneven
  • Quantity of data can exceed capacity to process
    and analyze
  • Predominance of English language
  • Digital divide persists
  • Customized environments where dissent eliminated
  • Can ICTS promote transnational citizenship?
  • Is transnational citizenship viable?

32
III Conclusions
  • Citizenship requires trusted intermediaries,
    institutions, and agencies to
  • Bring people of different points of view together
  • Mediate differences
  • Construct consensus
  • Make decisions
  • Citizenship in action
  • But does this require nation-state?

33
  • David Held erosion of nation-states need
    transnational democratic legal order
  • Will Kymlicka nation-states still powerful,
    territorial politics important, transnational
    associations not possible
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