ABSTRACT

Multinational federations rest on the coexistence of two or more nations within a single polity. Within these federations, minority nations play a significant role as their character differs from the other building blocks of the federation.

This edited volume offers a comprehensive comparison of two such minority nations - Quebec in Canada and Wallonia in Belgium - which exemplifies many dimensions, themes and issues highly resonant to the study of federalism and regionalism across the globe. Quebec and Wallonia have experienced several decades of federal dynamics where both regions have had to find their way as a minority nation in a multinational federation. For those studying federalism and regionalism their importance lies in a number of characteristics, but principally in the fact of these minority nations have transformed into mini-states with fully fledged legislative powers within their federation. This book seeks to study the specific dynamics within these small worlds and between them and the rest of the federation.

 

This text will be of key interest to students and scholars of federalism, nationalism and regionalism, comparative politics and policies, political ideas and social movements.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

Quebec and Wallonia in comparative perspective

part I|35 pages

Setting the stage

chapter 1|19 pages

Critical junctures, feedback effects and constitutional change

Quebec and Wallonia in comparative perspective

chapter 2|15 pages

Québécois and Walloon identities

The shift from an ethnic to a civic identity

part II|77 pages

Politics in Quebec and Wallonia

chapter 3|33 pages

Constructing Quebec and Wallonia

How political parties speak about their region

chapter 4|22 pages

Career patterns in multilevel Quebec and Wallonia

Towards a substate and federal political class?

chapter 5|20 pages

Local politics in Quebec and Wallonia

Local political dynamics as seen through the mayoral career

part III|67 pages

Policies in Quebec and Wallonia

chapter 6|18 pages

Québécois and Walloon public administrations

A tool towards autonomy?

chapter 7|15 pages

Language policy in Quebec and Wallonia

Two French-speaking linguistic minorities, two contrasted political strategies

chapter 8|21 pages

International relations of minority nations

Quebec and Wallonia compared

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion

Minority nations in multinational federations