Canada's Official Languages
Canada's Official Languages
Policy Versus Work Practice in the Federal Public Service
Gaspard, Helaina
University of Ottawa Press
03/2019
162
Mole
Inglês
9780776623351
15 a 20 dias
220
Introduction
Official Languages and the Federal Public Service
CHAPTER 1: Theoretical Foundations
The Politics of Language
Representative Bureaucracy
Historical Institutionalism and Layering
CHAPTER 2: Check Your Hat and Your Language at the Door (1867-1967)
Introduction
The Early Civil Service
Historical Context
The Strike at Trois-Rivieres
Ernest Lapointe-Prime Minister King's
Quebec Lieutenant
L'Ordre Jacques Cartier
The Jean Committee
Early Reform Efforts
The Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism, and Prime Minister Pearson's Promise
Conclusion
CHAPTER 3: The Official Languages Act, 1969 (1968-1972)
Introduction
Adopting the OLA 1969
Charting a Course for Implementation
French-Language Units (FLUs)
Bilingual Districts
Linguistic Designation of Positions
Conclusion
CHAPTER 4: If At First You Don't Succeed, Layer, Layer, and Then Layer Again (1973-1981)
Introduction
The 1973 Parliamentary Resolution on Official
Languages
Decentralizing Program Management
The Gens de l'Air Crisis and National Unity
Reorganizing and Restructuring the Public
Service
Management-centric Changes to the Official
Languages Program (1981)
Conclusion
CHAPTER 5: The OLA and Part V: The Right to Choose
Your Language of Work (1982-2013)
Introduction
Maintaining the Status Quo
Prime Minister Mulroney's Progressive
Conservatives and the Official Languages Act
The Official Languages Act, 1988
Part V: Official Language of Work Rights
Implementing Part V
Giving Meaning to Part V
Conclusion
Conclusion: Ideas, Institutions, and Actors
Ideas
Institutions
Actors
Conclusion
Appendix: Principal Actors
Department of the Secretary of State
Treasury Board Secretariat
Public Service Commission (PSC)
Office of the Commissioner of Official
Languages
Staff Unions
Bibliography
Index
Introduction
Official Languages and the Federal Public Service
CHAPTER 1: Theoretical Foundations
The Politics of Language
Representative Bureaucracy
Historical Institutionalism and Layering
CHAPTER 2: Check Your Hat and Your Language at the Door (1867-1967)
Introduction
The Early Civil Service
Historical Context
The Strike at Trois-Rivieres
Ernest Lapointe-Prime Minister King's
Quebec Lieutenant
L'Ordre Jacques Cartier
The Jean Committee
Early Reform Efforts
The Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism, and Prime Minister Pearson's Promise
Conclusion
CHAPTER 3: The Official Languages Act, 1969 (1968-1972)
Introduction
Adopting the OLA 1969
Charting a Course for Implementation
French-Language Units (FLUs)
Bilingual Districts
Linguistic Designation of Positions
Conclusion
CHAPTER 4: If At First You Don't Succeed, Layer, Layer, and Then Layer Again (1973-1981)
Introduction
The 1973 Parliamentary Resolution on Official
Languages
Decentralizing Program Management
The Gens de l'Air Crisis and National Unity
Reorganizing and Restructuring the Public
Service
Management-centric Changes to the Official
Languages Program (1981)
Conclusion
CHAPTER 5: The OLA and Part V: The Right to Choose
Your Language of Work (1982-2013)
Introduction
Maintaining the Status Quo
Prime Minister Mulroney's Progressive
Conservatives and the Official Languages Act
The Official Languages Act, 1988
Part V: Official Language of Work Rights
Implementing Part V
Giving Meaning to Part V
Conclusion
Conclusion: Ideas, Institutions, and Actors
Ideas
Institutions
Actors
Conclusion
Appendix: Principal Actors
Department of the Secretary of State
Treasury Board Secretariat
Public Service Commission (PSC)
Office of the Commissioner of Official
Languages
Staff Unions
Bibliography
Index