In North America in Question, leading analysts from Canada, the United States, and Mexico provide theoretically innovative and rich empirical reflections on current challenges sweeping the continent and on the faltering political support for North American regionalism.
Table of Contents
Introduction - North America in Question
Part I - North America and Political-Economic Turbulence
Chapter 1 - Global Economic Crisis and Regionalism in North America: Region-ness in Question?
Chapter 2 - Immovable Object or Unstoppable Force? Economic Crisis and the Social Construction of North America
Chapter 3 - Continental Governance, Post Crisis - Where is North America Going?
Chapter 4 - The Mexican Political-Security Crisis: Implications for the North American Community
Part II - North American Problems without North American Governance
Chapter 5 - North American Community from Above and from Below: Working Class Perspectives on Economic Integration and Crisis
Chapter 6 - Energy and the Environment - Prospects for New Forms of Continental Governance
Chapter 7 - Borders and Security in North America
Chapter 8 - Immigration and the Flows of People
Part III - Democratic Deficit, New Actors and Responses to the Crisis
Chapter 9 - Plus Ça Change: Double-Bilateralism and the Demise of Trilateralism
Chapter 10 - Paradiplomacy: States and Provinces in the Emerging Governance Structure of North America
Chapter 11 - (Re)Thinking the "New" North America through Women's Citizenship Struggles in Mexico
Chapter 12 - Democratic Deficits and the Role of Civil Society in North America: the SPP and Beyond
Conclusion: Will North America Survive?
Jeffrey Ayres is a professor in the Department of Political Science at Saint Michael’s College in Colchester, Vermont.