"A useful baseline for considering the future of Alberta politics." -- Trevor Harrison, AlbertaViews

In 2015, the New Democratic Party won an unprecedented victory in Alberta. Unseating the Progressive Conservatives-who had won every provincial election since 1971-they formed an NDP government for the first time in the history of the province.Orange Chinook is the first scholarly analysis of this election. It examines the legacy of the Progressive Conservative dynasty, the PC and NDP campaigns, polling, and online politics, providing context and setting the stage. It highlights the importance of Alberta's energy sector and how it relates to provincial politics with focus on the oil sands, the carbon tax, and pipelines.Examining the NDP in power, Orange Chinook draws on Indigenous, urban, and rural perspectives to explore the transition process and government finances and politics. It explores the governing style of premier Rachel Notley, paying special attention to her response to the 2016 For McMurray wildfire and to the role of women in politics.Orange Chinook brings together Alberta's top political watchers in this fascinating, multifaceted analysis.
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In 2015, the New Democratic Party won an unprecedented victory in Alberta. Unseating the Progressive Conservatives - who had won every provincial election since 1971 - they formed an NDP government for the first time in the history of the province. Orange Chinook is the first scholarly analysis of this election.
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PrefaceI. Setting the SceneIntroduction: Out of an Orange coloured SkyRichard SutherlandII. The Tory Fall and the NDP Victory Politics, Alberta Style: The Rise and Fall of the Progressive Conservatives, 1971-2015David TarasDeath of a Dynasty: The Tories and the 2015 ElectionDuane BrattReady for Rachel: The Alberta NDP's 2015 CampaignMelanee ThomasMarginally Better: Polling in the 2015 Alberta ElectionJanet Brown and John B. SantosAlberta Politics Online: Digital Retail Politics and Grassroots Growth, 2006-16Peter Malachy RyanIII. Oil Sands, Carbon Tax, and PipelinesBetting on Bitumen: Lougheed, Klein, and NotleyGillian StewardThe Politics of Alberta's Carbon TaxKevin TaftNotley: The Accidental Pipeline AdvocateDeborah YedlinIV. The NDP in PowerAfter Forty-Four Years: The Alberta New Democrats and the Transition to GovernmentKeith BrownseyFiscal Constraints on the Orange ChinookRon Kneebone and Jennifer ZwickerBeyond the ""Lovey-Dovey Talk"": The Orange Chinook and Indigenous ActivismBrad ClarkAlberta's Cities under the NDPJames WiltThe End of Exceptionalism: Post-rural Politics in AlbertaRoger EppV. Notley's Governing StyleA League of Their Own: Alberta's Women Party LeadersLori WilliamsNotley and the Beast: An Analysis of the Crisis Communication of Rachel Notley During the 2016 WildfireChaseten Remillard and Sheridan McVeanVI. Alberta's Future Political SystemWhat's Past is Prologue: Ontario 1990 and Alberta 2015Graham WhiteOut of the Blue: Goodbye Tories, Hello Jason KenneyAnthony M. Sayers and David K StewardAppendicesIndex
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781773850252
Publisert
2019-01-30
Utgiver
Vendor
University of Calgary Press
Vekt
701 gr
Høyde
228 mm
Bredde
243 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Om bidragsyterne

Gillian Steward is a Calgary writer and journalist, and former managing editor of the Calgary Herald. Her column appears every other week. Kevin Taft never thought he'd be a politician. A public policy analyst and head of his own Edmonton-based consulting company, Kevin's life took a sharp turn when he returned to Alberta in 1994 after a year away studying for a business degree. "Alberta had changed," he recalls. "The government was gutting our health care system without a plan, throwing people's lives into chaos." Kevin watched in growing dismay as the government took aim at education and other public services Albertans had carefully built over many years. In 1997, Kevin wrote Shredding the Public Interest, a national bestseller which confirmed many Albertans' concerns about the PCs. Clear Answers, a second bestseller in 2000, co-authored by Gillian Steward, exploded the myths of private, for-profit health care. Kevin stepped into public life in 2001, handily winning his Edmonton Riverview seat in the provincial election. In 2004, he was elected Leader of the Alberta Liberals and of the Loyal Opposition in the Alberta Le Duane Bratt is professor and chair in the Department of Economics, Justice, and Policy Studies at Mount Royal University. Keith Brownsey is a professor in the Department of Economics, Justice, and Policy Studies at Mount Royal University. Richard Sutherland is an assistant professor in the Department of Economics, Justice, and Policy Studies at Mount Royal University. David Taras is the Ralph Klein Chair in Media Studies at Mount Royal University. He is the author of The Newsmakers: The Media's Influence on Canadian Politics and Power and Betrayal in the Canadian Media. Roger Epp is Professor of Political Science at the University of Alberta. He served as founding Dean of the University's Augustana Campus in Camrose from 2004 to 2011. Much of his recent writing has explored what it means to live in the prairie West with a sense of memory, inheritance, and care. He is author of We are All Treaty People: Prairie Essays (2008), co-editor of Writing Off the Rural West (2001) and co-producer of the documentary "The Canadian Clearances" for CBC Radio Ideas.