Home Title Index Topic Index Sources Directory News Releases Sources Calendar

Saskatchewan Politics
AlterLinks Topic Index

  1. Agrarian Socialism
    The Cooperative Commonwealth in Saskatchewan: A Study in Political Sociology

    Resource Type: Book
    Published: 1968
    A study of the social background of the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation in Saskatchewan, which in 1944 became to first government with avowed socialist goals to be elected to office in Canada. The updated 1968 edition contains a new introduction and additional essays by five other scholars.
  2. No Bankers in Heaven
    Remembering the CCF

    Resource Type: Book
    Published: 1989
    An oral history of men and women who devoted themselves to building the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation.
  3. Off the Record
    The CCF in Saskatchewan

    Resource Type: Book
    Published: 1968
    An insider's account of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation in Saskatchewan.
  4. Our Generation
    Volume 6 Number 4

    Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical)
    Published: 1969
  5. Our Generation
    Volume 7 Number 1

    Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical)
  6. Our Generation
    Volume 7 Number 2

    Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical)
    Published: 1970
  7. The Working Class: Saskatchewan's Political Orphan
    Resource Type: Article
    Published: 2016
    We all suffer from the absence of working class politics. We are smothered in the business-oriented, neoliberal 'consensus' instructing us to reconcile ourselves to 'the new reality' -- rollbacks in social welfare and universal publicly funded programs; huge tax cuts to business and the rich, driving up public debt and enriching finance capitalism; an end to secure employment and guaranteed benefits; surrendering our dreams of home ownership unless we are prepared to accept a lifetime of debt enslavement; a future of uncertainty and endless personal struggle to sustain ourselves and our children. Flippant commentators now tell us the proletariat has been replaced by 'the precariat', and this will define the future of this new capitalism.


AlterLinks


© 2021.