Andrew McDougall is an assistant professor of Canadian politics at the University of Toronto Scarborough.
"""Andrew McDougall offers a penetrating look at the decline of the Quebec independence movement and majestically considers a range of factors that have as much to do with the choice of political elites to look away from the unresolved dispute between Quebec and Canada as they do with the profound social, cultural, and economic transformations that have taken place in these societies over the past three decades. This book reminds us that the 'Quebec conundrum' remains an inescapable reality of Canadian political dynamics and that the remnants of an unsettled past do not necessarily presage a tension-free future.""--François Rocher, Professor of Political Studies, University of Ottawa ""The declining salience of the Quebec sovereignty issue is perhaps the most intriguing puzzle of contemporary Canadian politics. Students and scholars of Canadian and Quebec politics now have a new tool to make sense of it all. Andrew McDougall offers a remarkably well-informed, analytically sophisticated, and compelling account of the reasons the political project of an independent Quebec has lost its appeal. This is a most welcome and lucid contribution.""--Daniel Salée, Professor of Political Science, Concordia University ""In this important book, Andrew McDougall shows that the Quebec sovereignty movement lost traction once Canada's federal elites stopped trying to reconcile competing national visions through mega-constitutional change and steered toward less contentious issues. Its core insight is that de-escalating nationalist conflict might require going against that most human of impulses - to do something about it. This book should be read by not only students of Canadian politics but anyone interested in the dynamics of self-determination struggles.""--Karlo Basta, Lecturer of Politics and International Relations, University of Edinburgh"