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Who We Are
File:INSERT.jpg
First edition cover
AuthorRudyard Griffiths
Original titleWe We Are: A Citizens Manifesto
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
GenreNon-fiction
PublisherDouglas & McIntyre
Publication date
2009-03-10
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Pages214
ISBN1553651243

Overview[edit]

Who We Are: A Citizens Manifesto is a 2008 book by Rudyard Griffiths. In it, Griffiths argues that Canadians have come to embrace their country as a “postmodern state”—a nation that downplays its history and makes few demands on its citizens, allowing them to find their allegiances where they may—in their region, their ethnic group or the language they speak. According to Griffiths the notion of a national identity, with shared responsibilities and a common purpose, is considered out of date, even a disadvantage in a world of transnational economies, resurgent regions and global immigration. Griffiths argues that this vision of Canada is an intellectual and practical dead end. Without a strong national identity and robust civic values, the country will be hard pressed to meet the daunting challenges that lie ahead: the social costs of an aging population, the unavoidable effects of global warming and the fallout of a dysfunctional immigration system. Griffiths calls for a rediscovery of the founding principles that made Canada the nation it is today and why a loyalty beyond the local and personal is essential to Canada's survival.

Analysis[edit]

The central myth that Who We Are sets out to challenge is the one that describes Canada's essence as its diversity and lack of a single "national" story. According to this trope, the indeterminacy of Canada's identity — the lack of a single answer to the question "who are we?" — is our secret comparative advantage in a world of globalization and diffused power. In Canada, the world's pre-eminent "postnational" state, national identity plays second fiddle to ethnic and regional loyalties, and citizenship is a ticket to entitlements, demanding very little in return. Griffiths insists that this conventional wisdom is not only off the mark, but dangerous. Canada, along with other advanced democracies, is confronting a host of challenges (most notably the effects of climate change, mass migration and an aging population), which requires the summoning of a collective will and purpose. Yet, at this very moment, Canadians are disengaging from national institutions and formal politics, volunteering in ever-lower numbers and opting for highly personalized forms of community and belonging. Unless we take steps to rebuild civic values and a sense of obligation to Canada's founding principles, Griffiths argues, our reservoir of social solidarity will run dry — along with our capacity to tackle the gathering "storm."

As co-founder of the Dominion Institute, an organization that promotes Canadian history and civic literacy, Griffiths has worked to address the low levels of knowledge Canadians have about their country's past and itspolitical and social institutions. Who We Are continues this mission, encouraging Canadians to think about their history differently. And for Griffiths, the first part of 19th century is particularly significant in understanding "who we are."

During the turbulent decade after the failed rebellions in Upper and Lower Canada, French and English reformers collaborated in the creation of civic institutions and values that made democratic self-government a reality. In the process, the author observes, they "forged an enduring consensus as to whom Canadians should be loyal to and why." The focus was no longer the governor-general and the imperial connection, or a particular religious or ethnic group (French/English, Protestant/Catholic), but rather an experiment in bicultural and democratic politics called Canada. This period also witnessed a "flurry of nation building," everything from non-denominational schools and local government to railways and the telegraph. Griffiths clearly admires these grand, national projects, and sees echoes of them in the other great historical moment that defined Canada: the postwar government of Louis St. Laurent.

More recent Canadian history, with its embrace of multiculturalism and decentralized federalism, has forgotten the crucial lessons of these earlier periods about citizenship, loyalty and nation-building. Instead, the belief took hold that newcomers to Canada would settle more effectively, and that regional grievances could be addressed more easily, if the country was seen to be made up of many equal identities, without an overarching creed.

Griffiths's reading of history, by contrast, leads him to conclude that Canada is a political community, based on shared democratic values and institutions rather than on ethnicity, region or language. We are, in short, "a nation of citizens, not a collection of communities." And it is a revitalized citizenship that he contends will save Canada from the empty promises of postnationalism.

Who We Are's diagnosis of the postnational predicament is compelling, refreshing and highly relevant, especially if one considers that other countries (including Britain) are looking with admiration at the Canadian experiment with high immigraiton. Where the reader maybe less convinced is in the cure the book offers for the disease.

Some of the proposals for kick-starting Canada's civic values are straightforward and draw on the experience of other societies: a new citizenship exam and mandatory language training for newcomers; increased government spending to integrate immigrants; and a national civics exam for graduating high-school students. Others, however such mandatory civic service and voting are more controversial, and reflect a particular philosophy about the boundaries of community in a globalized age. Indeed, while Griffiths accuses others of adopting a "20th-century mindset," Who We Are sometimes suffers from the same affliction.

The best example is his critique of the benefits enjoyed by non-resident Canadian citizens, and his recommendation that Canada annul the citizenship of those Canadians who voluntarily acquire the citizenship of another country. Griffiths writes that citizenship should be "earned through physical settlement" and an active contribution to the "economic and social betterment of the community." Dual citizenship is the enemy that corrodes social solidarity.

More evidence is needed for this latter assertion. Not all dual citizens are "hedging their bets" about Canada's future, and many of them are capable of managing their different allegiances. It's also worth remembering that the solutions to the challenges Griffiths identifies are international as well as national — a reality that makes global knowledge and know-how highly valuable commodities.

While Who We Are doesn't present all the answers, it does its readers the service by opening up an important debate.

Critical Reaction[edit]

In the The Globe and Mail, Jennifer Walsh's book review said:

In Policy Options, James Allan Evans' book review said:

In The Walrus, Daniel Baird's book review said:

References[edit]

  1. ^ Jennifer Walsh (2009). "First 'postnational' state? Baloney!". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2009-06-27. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  2. ^ James Allan Evans (2009-07-01). "Snapshot of Canadian national development" (PDF). Policy Options. Retrieved 2009-08-04.
  3. ^ Daniel Barid (2009-06-01). "Book Review: Who We Are". The Walrus. Retrieved 2009-08-04.

External links[edit]