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U.S.- Canada Relations: Countries
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This Committee is involved with issues related to Canada, particularly U.S. - Canada relations. As such, the Committee presents programs dealing with the complex and overlapping web of legal, economic and political regimes in the two countries. The Committee's agenda is to provide an opportunity to discuss Canadian legal developments of importance to ABA members and to promote dialogue between Section members about comparative and international law issues. The Committee leadership welcomes your participation in the Committee's agenda and can be contacted via email: Kenneth Nelson Frankel, Randall Hofley, Paul M. Lalonde, and Brian D. Wallace.
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Policy is a referred series of occasional papers focusing on contemporary issues in U.S.-Canada relations. Rapidly growing commerical ties between Canada and the U.S. are rising complex new policy issues in both countries concerning trade, investment, energy, the environment, resources management, cultural politics, and foreign affairs.
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Fields of research and teaching interests: Economics of integration, The European Union, U.S./Canada relations, urban economies and globalization, and culture policy and trade conflict. While his primary teaching in done in the area of international economics, Prof. Kresl offers courses in allof his research areas, including a Capstone Seminar that looks at the ways in which trade has affected the cultural industries, such as media and the arts, in various countries, and a Foundation Seminar, for First Year Students, "Perspectives on Cities." He has taught in both Bucknell-en-France (1990) and Bucknell in London (1992), and will do each again, in 1997 and 1998 respectively
Gill Troy is a U.S.-Canada expert at McGill University in Montreal. He says despite various disagreements between the two countries, one overriding issue must be kept in mind. "Even if there is an agreement to disagree, even if the United States says: 'look, we can't do this because of internal constituency pressures or external trade pressures,' the awareness that ... while we might part on some issues, we are still fundamentally friends, we are still fundamentally linked in so many ways - economically, ideologically, intellectually, culturally, socially - is important," he says.
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