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Jul 30, 2010 | ISBN 9780307368379
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Praise
“Axworthy is well known for his innovative ideas on foreign policy. He promoted a ‘human security’ agenda that focused on humanitarian crises around the world…. He called for an international criminal court, brokered a ban on landmines and drew international attention to the plight of war-affected children. In December 2000, he received the Sen. Patrick Leahy Humanitarian Award from the Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation for his leadership in ‘the global effort to outlaw the use of child-soldiers, to bring war criminals to justice and to end the human tragedy of landmines.’”
—Princeton University, citation for the James Madison Medal for outstanding public service
“In Navigating a New [World], Axworthy draws together experiences from his life and the give-and-take of domestic and foreign politics as he threads an eloquent argument about Canada’s vocation as a middle power — one working towards a humane and just world. It’s a must read for a number of reasions, most particularly because it presents a mainstream politician who still thinks in terms of justice, compassion, and global responsibility.”
—See Magazine, Book Guide
“Navigating a New World is not the memoir of a statesman who retires to the farm to reflect and remember…. A passionate reformer, [Axworthy] remains at the ramparts today, which makes his book as much about the present as the past. … His voice is critical, triumphant, self-assured, arbitrary, angry and anguished. In his stubborn belief in the world’s possibilities, it is also wonderfully romantic. … [Axworthy] framed a new internationalism for Canada. … His account is thoughtful, intelligent and compassionate, like the man himself.”
—Literary Review of Canada
“[Lloyd Axworthy] has been the best foreign minister that I can remember in my active life in international affairs…. His work on everything from landmines to child soldiers has been exemplary.”
—Stephen Lewis
“Axworthy…charted Canada’s place in the world in the latter [decades] of the 20th century, and in so doing defined new possibilities for [our] country…. Axworthy’s signal contribution [as foreign minister] was to revive the sense of Canadian internationalism that has always been the core of an immigrant nation, to foster the sense that we are part of a global community…. There is no doubt that under his direction, Canada once again aspired to the heady reaches of global leadership…. The Ottawa protocol banning anti-personnel landmines seemed like a Utopian dream. Yet under Axworthy’s leadership, it became an international treaty. So did the International Criminal Court.”
—Edmonton Journal
“[Axworthy] provides useful insights into the national and international political process….Navigating a New World is not simply a memoir. It is also an attempt to advocate a new direction for Canada….Axworthy’s assessment of past, present and future is a well-articulated presentation of the dominant set of beliefs that have guided Canadian thinking for decades.”
—Winnipeg Free Press
“Navigating a New World presents a blueprint for a Canadian foreign policy… Axworthy may be a peacenik but he’s no pacifist….He makes a compelling case that Canada’s political culture of compromise offers a model for settling the world’s disputes….[Navigating a New World is] that kind of penetrating overview you might expect from a former foreign affairs minister who was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to ban land mines. It’s also a brave minorty-report sort of book, fitting for someone who was once Western Canada’s only Liberal MP.”
—The Vancouver Sun and the Times-Colonist (Victoria)
“In Navigating a New World, Axworthy provides a detailed account of his experience at the helm of Canadian foreign policy. It reveals the portrait of a crusading idealist, a man passionately committed to creating a better world — and his own ideas about how to do it. … This is the vision of a populist and radical thinker. … There is much in the Axworthy analysis one can applaud. … One cannot read Axworthy’s book without being convinced of his sincere commitment to a better world.”
—The National Post
“In his four years as foreign affairs minister, …Axworthy has remade Canadian foreign policy, introducing the buzzwords “soft power” and “human security” into Canada’s political lexicon. He has become the darling of aid agencies and human rights crusaders for giving a voice to the poor, the hungry and the embattled victims of war in international politics.”
—Ottawa Citizen
“Navigating a New World is a challenge to Canada and its citizens to help map a future world that emphasizes human security, not corporate profit, a world that confronts and bests poverty, war and human privation. The former cabinet minister…urges Canada to promote a world dominated by human compassion. He makes a compelling case and it’s hard to dismiss this book as simply a soft power plea.”
—The Calgary Herald
“Axworthy’s book…makes a serious contribution to debate about Canada’s role in the world, and should be read by anyone interested in…the shape and challenges of the modern world. It’s a book eminently worth reading for its passion and strengths, and arguing with for its absences.”
—The Globe and Mail
“Mr. Axworthy has redefined diplomacy. He has shaped a global society where the safety of the individual is at the center of international priorities. His vision has focused the attention of the world on the innocent victims of human conflict. He has been a leader in the global effort to outlaw the use of child soldiers, to bring war criminals to justice, and to end the human tragedy caused by landmines. Mr. Axworthy’s steadfast resolve and extraordinary leadership initiated and inspired the Ottawa Convention, the international treaty to ban landmines…the exemplary work of [an] extraordinary man.”
—Citation from the Senator Patrick J. Leahy Humanitarian Award 2000
“Richly detailed and forcefully argued…. Axworthy…demonstrat[es] how Canadian influence can make a tangible difference in people’s lives around the world…. Axworthy’s case that we really can and should be doing more to advance human security around the world is compelling, and that is more than enough to make this a very valuable book.”
—The Gazette
“Axworthy’s book proposes a coherent idea, or set of interconnected ideas, for Canadian foreign policy as no one has since [Lester] Pearson did with his notions of peacekeeping and of Canada as a ‘helpful fixer’ between the U.S. and Europe. More soft power and human security, of course. But Axworthy magnifies those concepts and gives them a new purposefulness that’s expressed in his opening sentence: ‘Canadians are on the road to global citizenship.’ … . His vision deserves a careful hearing by Canadians, by Ottawa — and by Paul Martin.”
—The Toronto Star
“The former cabinet minister makes a compelling case, rejecting an American-centred view of the world and urging Canada to promote a world dominated by human compassion.”
—Truro Daily News
Praise for Lloyd Axworthy, winner of:
• the Princeton University James Madison Medal
• the Senator Patrick J. Leahy Humanitarian Award
• the CARE International Humanitarian Award
• the Thakore Award
“Canada’s outgoing foreign minister is one of the best in memory.” — Toronto Star
“He has become the darling of aid agencies and human rights crusaders for giving a voice to the poor, the hungry and the embattled victims of war. In his four years as foreign affairs minister, [he] remade Canadian foreign policy.” — Ottawa Citizen
“Axworthy. . .charted Canada’s place in the world in the latter half of the 20th century, and in so doing defined new possibilities for [our] country.” — The Edmonton Journal
Table Of Contents
Acknowledgments
Prologue: Canada and the World
Part I: Emma and Us
Chapter 1 — The Road to Gulu
Part II: The Tenth Floor
Chapter 2 — Vocational Training
Chapter 3 — Choices and Consequences
Part III: Border Choices
Chapter 4 — How to Make Love to a Porcupine
Chapter 5 — The North American Condo
Part IV: Human Security
Chapter 6 — The Ottawa Process
Chapter 7 — Chronicle of a Death Foretold
Chapter 8 — Responsibility to Protect
Chapter 9 — A New Court for a New Century
Chapter 10 — The Crowded Global Village
Part V: The United Nations
Chapter 11 — Rewiring the UN
Chapter 12 — Rebirth of a Country
Part VI: Environmental Security
Chapter 13 — The Machine in the Garden
Chapter 14 — Kyoto and Beyond
Part VII: Searching for Survival in a World of Weapons
Chapter 15 — Disarmament on Earth, Disarmament in Space
Part VIII: The Two Emmas
Chapter 16 — Putting Our Ship in Order
Chapter 17 — Navigating a New World
Notes
Index
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