1. David Leyton-Brown and Joseph T. Jockel, “Introduction” toWeathering the Calm: The State of the Canada-U.S. Relationship, 1995, a special issue of The American Review of Canadian Studies[hereafter ARCS] (Winter 1994): 449–451.
2. John Kirton, “Promoting Plurilateral Partnership: Managing United States-Canada Relations in the Post-Cold War World,” ARCS (Winter 1994): 453–472.
3. Peter Karl Kresl, “Review Essay: Struggling in the Net,” ARCS (Winter 1994): 561–572.
4. John Herd Thompson and Stephen J. Randall,Canada and the United States: Ambivalent Allies(Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia Press, and Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1994, 1997, 2002).
5. U.S. official cited in David T. Jones, “Canada and the United States in the Chrétien Years,”Policy Options(November 2000): 33–43; Edward Greenspon and Graham Fraser, “On the Fairway of Foreign Policy,” Globe 5 April 1997; Stephen J. Randall, “A Not So Magnificent Obsession: The United States, Cuba, and Canada from Revolution to the Helms-Burton Law,”Canadian-American Public Policy36 (November 1998): 1–30;Wall Street Journal, 11 July 1996 and 17 March 1997; Globe, 15 March 1997.