Canadian Federalism and the Political Economy of Energy and the Environment (original) (raw)
Environmental Policy Convergence in Canada's Fossil Fuel Provinces? Regulatory Streamlining, Impediments, and Drift
Anna Zalik
Canadian Public Policy, 2017
View PDFchevron_right
Making Energy Policy: The Canadian Experience
Jennifer Winter
View PDFchevron_right
Alberta, Petro-state politics: Where Big Oil and government interests are intertwined.
Pierre-Alexandre Cardinal
View PDFchevron_right
Contested crude: Multiscalar identities, conflicting discourses, and narratives of oil production in Canada
Justin Leifso
Energy Research & Social Science, 2020
View PDFchevron_right
Trade, Tarsands and Treaties: The Political Economy Context of Community Energy in Canada
Julie MacArthur
View PDFchevron_right
Of pipe dreams and fossil fools: Advancing Canadian fossil fuel hegemony through the Trans Mountain pipeline
Henner Busch, Naima Kraushaar-Friesen
Energy Research and Social Science, 2020
View PDFchevron_right
Developing Alberta’s Oil Sands: From Karl Clark to Kyoto & Challenging Legitimacy at the Precipice of Energy Calamity
İnsan & Toplum (The Journal of Humanity and Society), Tahir Nakip
View PDFchevron_right
Canadian Circumstances: The Evolution of Canada's Climate Change Policy
Paul Samson
Energy & Environment, 2001
View PDFchevron_right
Geopolitics, Ecology and Stephen Harper's Reinvention of Canada
Simon Dalby
View PDFchevron_right
Transition in a Petro Province? The Alberta NDP in Office
Jeff Diamanti
Socialism and Democracy, 2016
View PDFchevron_right
Following protocol : the political geography of climate change policymaking in Canada
Laurel Murray
2014
View PDFchevron_right
Crisis in the Tar Sands: Fossil Capitalism and the Future of the Alberta Hydrocarbon Economy
Tyler McCreary
Historical Materialism
View PDFchevron_right
Alberta Climate-Change Policy in the Canada-US Context
David Houle
2009
View PDFchevron_right
Making Federalism Work for Climate Change: Canada's Division of Powers Over Carbon Taxes
Nathalie Chalifour
View PDFchevron_right
Crossroads in Alberta: Climate Capitalism or Ecological Democracy
Laurie Adkin
Socialist Studies, 2017
View PDFchevron_right
Fractured alliance: state-corporate actions and fossil fuel resistance in Northwest British Columbia, Canada
Fiona MacPhail
Journal of Political Ecology, 2021
View PDFchevron_right
No country would find 173 billion barrels of oil in the ground and just leave them there" : Examining the hegemony of fossil fuels in the Trudeau government's discourse on the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion project
Naima Kraushaar-Friesen
Human Ecology Master's thesis, 2019
View PDFchevron_right
Experts at Work: The Canadian State, North American Environmentalism, and Renewable Energy in an Era of Limits, 1968-1983
Henry (Hank) Trim
View PDFchevron_right
Energy politics in the USA and Canada
Eric M. Uslaner
Energy Policy, 1987
View PDFchevron_right
Energy Humanities and the Petroleumscape
Imre Szeman
Oil Spaces, 2021
View PDFchevron_right
Climate Change Inaction in Canada: Political Subsystems and Policy Outcomes in the Oil & Gas Industry, 1999-2019
Nicolas Viens
2021
View PDFchevron_right
The struggle of ideas and self-interest in Canadian climate policy
Kathryn Harrison
2010
View PDFchevron_right
Is "Conservation" Worth Conserving? The Implications of Alberta's "Energy Resource Conservation" Mandate for Renewable Energy
Michal C Moore
View PDFchevron_right
The Coal Industry and Electricity Policy in Ontario and Alberta
David Houle
2012 Canadian Political Science Association Annual Meeting, 2012
View PDFchevron_right
The Policy-Regulatory Nexus in Canada’s Energy Decision-Making
Stephen Bird
Energy Regulation Quarterly, 2018
View PDFchevron_right
Howlett, Michael, and Jonathan Craft. “Application of Federal Legislation to Alberta’s Mineable Oil Sands.” Oil Sands Research Information Network (OSRIN) University of Alberta, 2013.
Michael Howlett
View PDFchevron_right
Tools and Levers: Energy as an Instrument of Canadian Foreign Policy
Duane Bratt
View PDFchevron_right
Canadian Federalism in the Context of Combating Climate Change
Alexis Bélanger
Constitutional Forum / Forum constitutionnel
View PDFchevron_right
The New Nature of Things? Canada’s Conservative Government and the Design of the New Environmental Subject
Aaron Franks, Jonathan Peyton
View PDFchevron_right
Federalism, the Environment and the Charter in Canada
Dayna Nadine Scott
2016
View PDFchevron_right
Jurisdictional Wrangling over Climate Policy in the Canadian Federation: Key Issues in the Provincial Constitutional Challenges to Parliament’s Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act
Nathalie Chalifour
Ottawa Law Review, 2019
View PDFchevron_right
Used Oil Policies to Protect the Environment: An Overview of Canadian Experiences
Hilary Nixon
2000
View PDFchevron_right
Fossil Fuel Subsidies in Canada: Governance Implications in the Net-Zero Transition
Temitope Onifade
Canada Climate Law Initiative, 2022
View PDFchevron_right
Tar Wars: Oil, Environment and Alberta’s Image
Gordon Alley-Young
Canadian Journal of Communication
View PDFchevron_right
Beyond Federalism: The Kyoto Protocol and Multi-Level Governance in Canada
Dion Curry
2005
View PDFchevron_right