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Taylor Robertson McDonald

Dr. Taylor Robertson McDonald is a Scholar-in-residence at American University’s School of International Service in Washington, D.C.. He is a former post-doctoral fellow at the Taube Centre for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences at The Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland.
Identity Discourses and Canadian Foreign Policy in the War on Terror

Identity Discourses and Canadian Foreign Policy in the War on Terror

This book examines how popular narratives of Canadian identity became implicated in Canada’s foreign policy in the Global War on Terror. McDonald argues that Canada’s decisions to join the 2001 Afghanistan War yet abstain from the 2003 Iraq War became politically possible because parliamentarians linked these policies to similar narratives of an enduring Canadian identity - even while re-imagining their meanings.

Identity Discourses and Canadian Foreign Policy in the War on Terror

Identity Discourses and Canadian Foreign Policy in the War on Terror

This book examines how popular narratives of Canadian identity became implicated in Canada’s foreign policy in the Global War on Terror. McDonald argues that Canada’s decisions to join the 2001 Afghanistan War yet abstain from the 2003 Iraq War became politically possible because parliamentarians linked these policies to similar narratives of an enduring Canadian identity - even while re-imagining their meanings.

Identity Discourses and Canadian Foreign Policy in the War on Terror

Identity Discourses and Canadian Foreign Policy in the War on Terror

This book examines how popular narratives of Canadian identity became implicated in Canada’s foreign policy in the Global War on Terror. McDonald argues that Canada’s decisions to join the 2001 Afghanistan War yet abstain from the 2003 Iraq War became politically possible because parliamentarians linked these policies to similar narratives of an enduring Canadian identity - even while re-imagining their meanings.