An interpretive, paradigmatic, and comparative analysis of Canadian and Australian green parties

Green parties have acquired political influence in Australia, and more recently, Canada. Specifically, Australia has federal and state Green parliamentarians, while polling data demonstrates that since 1991, Canadian Greens have, taken together, increased their share of the popular vote. Notwithstan...

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Main Author: Boston, FTH
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.utas.edu.au/19159/
https://eprints.utas.edu.au/19159/1/Boston_whole_thesis.pdf
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spelling ftunivtasmania:oai:eprints.utas.edu.au:19159 2023-05-15T17:22:59+02:00 An interpretive, paradigmatic, and comparative analysis of Canadian and Australian green parties Boston, FTH 2003 application/pdf https://eprints.utas.edu.au/19159/ https://eprints.utas.edu.au/19159/1/Boston_whole_thesis.pdf en eng https://eprints.utas.edu.au/19159/1/Boston_whole_thesis.pdf Boston, FTH 2003 , 'An interpretive, paradigmatic, and comparative analysis of Canadian and Australian green parties', PhD thesis, University of Tasmania. Green Party (Australia) Green Party of Canada Green movement Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2003 ftunivtasmania 2020-05-30T07:33:11Z Green parties have acquired political influence in Australia, and more recently, Canada. Specifically, Australia has federal and state Green parliamentarians, while polling data demonstrates that since 1991, Canadian Greens have, taken together, increased their share of the popular vote. Notwithstanding their electoral successes, the two countries' Green parties have also had a notable effect on the public's conception of environmental issues. To date, however, there has been barely any examination of the paradigm, or more specifically, the beliefs of the federal and state/provincial Canadian and Australian Greens, let alone a comparative analysis of the two countries' set of Green parties. Hence, I provide a paradigmatic, comparative analysis of the Green parties of Canada and Australia, most substantially, via the interpretive approach which identifies the ethnographic writer/researcher as, on balance, a part of and not entirely removed from the research study (hence, the use of the word 'I' throughout the dissertation). I argue that the recent scholarly publications detailing the nature of the Australian and Canadian Greens do not offer a paradigmatic examination or comparative analysis of the two countries' Green parties, and accordingly, I attempt to fill this gap in the literature. Moreover, I ask if the Greens of Australia and Canada share similar or different paradigmatic positions. My findings reveal that the two countries' Green parties share a common belief system, and to varying degrees all value, for instance, environmental protection, social justice, interdependence, diversity, and nonviolence. This said, I offer three notable differences. Several of the Australian Green parties advocate plantation forestry, which is in direct contrast to the philosophy of ecoforestry — an ecosystem-based interpretation of forestry advocated by most if not all of Canada's Greens. Together, the Green parties of Australia recognise the relationship between physical activity, health, and societal well-being more often than their Canadian counterparts. Generally speaking, Canada's Greens lean towards principle-based politics (though, the Newfoundland Green Party is somewhat of an exception), while Australia's Greens tend to embrace constituency-based politics. Thesis Newfoundland University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints
op_collection_id ftunivtasmania
language English
topic Green Party (Australia)
Green Party of Canada
Green movement
spellingShingle Green Party (Australia)
Green Party of Canada
Green movement
Boston, FTH
An interpretive, paradigmatic, and comparative analysis of Canadian and Australian green parties
topic_facet Green Party (Australia)
Green Party of Canada
Green movement
description Green parties have acquired political influence in Australia, and more recently, Canada. Specifically, Australia has federal and state Green parliamentarians, while polling data demonstrates that since 1991, Canadian Greens have, taken together, increased their share of the popular vote. Notwithstanding their electoral successes, the two countries' Green parties have also had a notable effect on the public's conception of environmental issues. To date, however, there has been barely any examination of the paradigm, or more specifically, the beliefs of the federal and state/provincial Canadian and Australian Greens, let alone a comparative analysis of the two countries' set of Green parties. Hence, I provide a paradigmatic, comparative analysis of the Green parties of Canada and Australia, most substantially, via the interpretive approach which identifies the ethnographic writer/researcher as, on balance, a part of and not entirely removed from the research study (hence, the use of the word 'I' throughout the dissertation). I argue that the recent scholarly publications detailing the nature of the Australian and Canadian Greens do not offer a paradigmatic examination or comparative analysis of the two countries' Green parties, and accordingly, I attempt to fill this gap in the literature. Moreover, I ask if the Greens of Australia and Canada share similar or different paradigmatic positions. My findings reveal that the two countries' Green parties share a common belief system, and to varying degrees all value, for instance, environmental protection, social justice, interdependence, diversity, and nonviolence. This said, I offer three notable differences. Several of the Australian Green parties advocate plantation forestry, which is in direct contrast to the philosophy of ecoforestry — an ecosystem-based interpretation of forestry advocated by most if not all of Canada's Greens. Together, the Green parties of Australia recognise the relationship between physical activity, health, and societal well-being more often than their Canadian counterparts. Generally speaking, Canada's Greens lean towards principle-based politics (though, the Newfoundland Green Party is somewhat of an exception), while Australia's Greens tend to embrace constituency-based politics.
format Thesis
author Boston, FTH
author_facet Boston, FTH
author_sort Boston, FTH
title An interpretive, paradigmatic, and comparative analysis of Canadian and Australian green parties
title_short An interpretive, paradigmatic, and comparative analysis of Canadian and Australian green parties
title_full An interpretive, paradigmatic, and comparative analysis of Canadian and Australian green parties
title_fullStr An interpretive, paradigmatic, and comparative analysis of Canadian and Australian green parties
title_full_unstemmed An interpretive, paradigmatic, and comparative analysis of Canadian and Australian green parties
title_sort interpretive, paradigmatic, and comparative analysis of canadian and australian green parties
publishDate 2003
url https://eprints.utas.edu.au/19159/
https://eprints.utas.edu.au/19159/1/Boston_whole_thesis.pdf
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation https://eprints.utas.edu.au/19159/1/Boston_whole_thesis.pdf
Boston, FTH 2003 , 'An interpretive, paradigmatic, and comparative analysis of Canadian and Australian green parties', PhD thesis, University of Tasmania.
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