LEADER 03660nam a22006615i 4500001 99125290782106421 005 20230626053342.0 006 m|||||o||d|||||||| 007 cr cn||||||||| 008 190828s2019 onc fo d z eng d 010 |z97122079 016 |z949321389 020 1-4426-0251-1 024 7 10.3138/9781442602519 |2doi 035 (CKB)2440000000015138 035 (OCoLC)191818965 035 (CaPaEBR)ebrary10175813 035 (SSID)ssj0000375948 035 (PQKBManifestationID)12101174 035 (PQKBTitleCode)TC0000375948 035 (PQKBWorkID)10327570 035 (PQKB)10470307 035 (CaPaEBR)408046 035 (CaBNvSL)slc00207864 035 (MiAaPQ)EBC3248507 035 (MiAaPQ)EBC4931168 035 (DE-B1597)528834 035 (OCoLC)999642724 035 (DE-B1597)9781442602519 035 (VaAlCD)20.500.12592/qkbxjd 035 (schport)gibson_crkn/2009-12-01/4/408046 035 (OCoLC)1385303577 035 (MdBmJHUP)musev2_104112 035 (EXLCZ)992440000000015138 040 DE-B1597 |beng |cDE-B1597 |erda 041 eng 043 n-cn--- 044 onc |cCA-ON 045 x8x9 050 4 F1034.2 |b.N415 1996 055 01 FC630eb 072 7 POL056000 |2bisacsh 082 04 971.064 |221 100 1 Nevitte, Neil, |eauthor. 245 14 The Decline of Deference : |bCanadian Value Change in Cross National Perspective / |cNeil Nevitte. 264 1 Toronto : |bUniversity of Toronto Press, |c[2019] 264 4 |c©1996 300 1 online resource (390 p.) 336 text |btxt 337 computer |bc 338 online resource |bcr 546 English 504 Includes bibliographical references: p. [353]-366. 500 Includes index. 588 0 Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 28. Aug 2019) 505 0 Table of Contents -- Preface -- PART I: SETTING THE STAGE -- Chapter 1 A Decade of Turmoil -- Interpreting Turmoil -- Canada as One Stage -- Three Perspectives on Canadian Value Change -- Chapter 2 Setting the Stage -- Structural Shifts in Context -- From Structural Change to Value Change -- Public Priorities and Orientations Towards Authority -- Conclusions -- PART II: POLITICAL VALUE CHANGE -- Chapter 3 A Changing Political Culture? -- Interest in Politics -- Confidence in Governmental Institutions -- Confidence in Non-Governmental Institutions 505 0 The Rise of CosmopolitanismConclusions -- Chapter 4 Changing Patterns of Political Participation -- The Rise of Protest Behaviour -- New Movements -- The Case of Environmentalism -- Civil Permissiveness -- Orientations towards Change -- Challenging Political Authority -- Conclusions -- PART III: ECONOMIC VALUE CHANGE -- Chapter 5 Changing Economic Cultures -- Support for the Free Market -- Why do People Live in Need? -- When Jobs are Scarce -- Free Markets and Free Trade: The Case of NAFTA -- Conclusions -- Chapter 6 A Changing Work Culture 505 0 The Work Ethic and Pride in WorkWhy do People Work? -- Elaborating Canadian-U.S. Comparisons -- Workplace Participation -- Conclusions -- PART IV: PRIMARY RELATIONS -- Chapter 7 Moral Outlooks -- Shifting Religious Orientations -- Moral Permissiveness -- Tolerance -- Situational Tolerance -- Conclusions -- Chapter 8 Family Values: Stability and Change -- The Family and Marriage -- Women and Men, Family and Work -- Parents and Children -- Connecting Authority Orientations: The Family, Work and the Polity -- Conclusions -- PART V: CONCLUSIONS 505 0 Chapter 9 Patterns of ChangeCanada as an Advanced Industrial State: Perspective 1 -- Canada as a North American State: Perspective 2 -- Canada as an Immigrant Society: Perspective 3 -- Revisiting Authority Orientations -- Authority Orientations and the Status Quo -- Appendix: World Values Survey -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y 520 Since the 1980's Canadians have experienced turmoil on an unprecedented scale and on a variety of fronts. Constitutional battles pitted citizen against citizen and publics against leaders. Vigorous new interest groups challenged governments to respond to new issues like the environment, gay rights, and equality for women. In the face of expanding trade relations Canadians mobilized to respond to economic uncertainty, and family relations were exposed to new stresses. What explains the turmoil? In this extraordinarily wide-ranging book, Neil Nevitte demonstrates that the changing patterns of Canadian values are connected. Changing attitudes to authority in the family are connected to changing attitudes to the work-place and to politics and they all point to one theme--the decline of deference. Canada's turmoil is not unique, nor is it a result of the "Americanization" of Canadian values. Canada, he argues is but one stage on which the rhythms of post-industrial value change are played out. 650 0 Political culture |zCanada. 650 0 Social values |zCanada |vCross-cultural studies. 650 0 Public opinion |zCanada. 651 0 Canada |xPolitics and government |y1980- 651 0 Canada |xSocial conditions |y1945- 655 4 Cross-cultural studies. |0(OCoLC)fst01423769 655 4 Electronic books. 776 |z1-55111-031-8 906 BOOK