1. Garth Stevenson,Unfulfilled Union(Toronto: Gage, 1982). 65.
2. Richard A. Liroff, “Enforcement and Compliance: Report on the State of the Great Lakes Environment,” unpublished Conservation Foundation manuscript, July 1988, 10.
3. Peter M. Leslie,Federal State, National Economy(Toronto: University of Toronto, 1987). Certain provinces have, in contrast, proven quite active in social service delivery, such as medical care and education.
4. A. Paul Pross,Group Politics and Public Policy(Toronto: Oxford University, 1986), 216–244. Also see Thomas L. Ilgen, “Between Europe and America, Ottawa and the Provinces: Regulating Toxic Substances in Canada,”Canadian Public Policy11, 3 (1985): 578–590.
5. Pross,Group Politics and Public Policy, 102–103. Also see Peter N. Nemetz, et al. “Toxic Chemical Regulation in Canada: Preliminary Estimates of Costs and Benefits,”Canadian Public Administration25 (Fall 1982): 405–419.