1. Parliamentary Governance in The Age of Neoliberalism
2. Neoliberalism and The Concentration of Political Power
3. The Origins of Neoliberal Parliamentarism: The Davis Years,
1981-1984
4. Ontario in Transition: The Peterson Era, 1985-1990
5. "Democracy Under Seige": The NDP’s Neoliberal Turn and The
Decline of Parliament at Queen’s Park, 1990-1995
6. Revolution at the Ontario Legislature, 1995-2003
7. Consolidating A Revolution: The Liberal Years, 2003-2018
8. "Common Sense" Austerity Returns to Ontario: The Ford
Government, 2018-2020
9. Parliament in The Age of Authoritarian Neoliberalism
References
Tom McDowell is an instructor in the Department of
Politics and Public Administration at Ryerson University.
" Neoliberal Parliamentarism cuts across numerous domains of
political science. There are many casual discussions about the
decline of parliamentary government, but seldom is this documented
in the meticulous detail that this study undertakes. There are even
fewer accounts linking the curtailment of democratic deliberation
with the formation of the neoliberal policy regime and the spread
of authoritarian practices.. Tom McDowell has made an indispensable
contribution to the study of the current practices and limits of
parliamentary democracy and to Ontario and Canadian politics."
--Greg Albo, Associate Professor of Political Science, York
University
"A political economy analysis of parliamentary procedure?
Unconventional, to be sure, but in Neoliberal Parliamentarism it
proves insightful. Anchored in a sophisticated theoretical
understanding of the nature and goals of neoliberalism, McDowell's
comprehensive account of changes to legislative practices and rules
at the Ontario Legislature in recent decades convincingly
demonstrates that the decline of parliament is both real and deeply
concerning."--Graham White, Professor Emeritus of Political
Science, University of Toronto
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