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Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (Canada),
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Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT), more commonly known as
Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada, is a
department in the
Government of Canada which has responsibility for
foreign policy and
diplomacy, as well as import/export and international trade policies.
The department was once called the Department of External Affairs and later the Department of External Affairs and International Trade, the word
foreign being deliberately avoided since the department was founded while Canada's
foreign policy was still controlled by the
United Kingdom. The department's name was finally changed to the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade in
1993 some 60 years after Canada had gained control over its foreign policy.
The change in name was formalized by an Act of Parliament in 1995. DFAIT maintained two separate ministers: the
Minister of Foreign Affairs with lead responsibility for the portfolio, and the
Minister of International Trade. The
Minister for International Cooperation, with responsibilities for agencies such as the
Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), also fell under DFAIT.
A separate Department of Foreign Affairs and Department of International Trade were created in December 2003 through an administrative separation of the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade.
thumb|Head office of Foreign Affairs CanadaHowever, on
February 15,
2005 legislation to formally abolish the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade and provide a statutory basis for a separate Department of Foreign Affairs and a Department of International Trade failed to pass a first vote in the
Canadian House of Commons. However, the government maintained the administrative separation of the two departments despite neither having been established through an Act of Parliament.
In early 2006, under the new government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, the Department of Foreign Affairs and the Department of International Trade were rejoined to again form a single Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade.
Leadership of DFAIT is provided by three ministers. The Minister of Foreign Affairs is responsible for foreign policy matters and, as the senior minister in the department, has overall responsibility for the department. The Minister of International Trade is, as the name suggests, responsible for international trade matters. The Minister of International Cooperation is responsible for certain delegated foreign policy matters.
Peter MacKay currently serves as
Minister of Foreign Affairs and
David Emerson serves as
Minister of International Trade. Josée Verner serves as the Minister of International Cooperation.
DFAIT is headquartered in the
Lester B. Pearson Building on the banks of the
Rideau River in the nation's capital.
Significance of nomenclature
It should be noted that the change of terminology from "External Affairs" to "Foreign Affairs" recognized, albeit belatedly, a shift that had occurred many years before. At the time that the External Affairs portfolio was created in
1905, Canada was a self-governing
dominion in the British Empire and did not have an independent foreign policy. Most foreign diplomacy was conducted with other parts of the
British Empire which were not considered "foreign" lands. The United Kingdom and other colonial powers still routinely divided their conduct of overseas policy into foreign affairs (e.g. the UK's
Foreign Office) and domestic or "colonial affairs" (the
Colonial Office or
Dominion Office, which were later reorganized and combined into one department, the
Foreign and Commonwealth Office). Diplomacy outside the Empire (eg. between Canada and its non-Empire neighbours, the
United States,
Russia,
St. Pierre and Miquelon, and
Greenland) were conducted by the foreign office of the
United Kingdom.
The term "External Affairs" avoided the question of whether a colony or Dominion, self-governing and hence sovereign in some respects but sharing the
Head of State with other countries, could by definition have foreign affairs. Implicitly, since the Department was responsible for affairs with both
Commonwealth and non-Commonwealth countries, all "external" relations were of a type, even when the Head of State was shared with other nations.
Canada's management of its own foreign relations evolved over time, with key milestones including
World War I (at the conclusion of which Canada was a signatory of the
Treaty of Versailles and a member of the
League of Nations), the
Balfour Declaration, increased direct conduct of bilateral matters with the
United States (where Canada had its own
representatives since at least 1927), and finally, the
Statute of Westminster and the
Second World War. The
Statute of Westminster clarified that Canada (and certain other colonies such as
Australia and
New Zealand) were primarily responsible for, among other things, the conduct of their own foreign affairs. After
World War II, Canada was a founding member of the
United Nations and participant in its own right in post-war settlement talks and other international fora, and in most respects the conduct of foreign affairs was no longer "colonial".
Over the years after World War II, a number of other historical traditions were slowly abolished or brought into accordance with reality, such as the practice of Canadian
Ambassadors presenting
diplomatic credentials signed by the
Queen of Canada (including, on occasion, credentials written in French as an
official language of Canada); Canadian Ambassadors now present credentials signed by the
Governor General of Canada. Other traditions remain, such as the exchange of
High Commissioners instead of Ambassadors between Commonwealth countries (and
High Commissioners present credentials from the
Head of Government, as the
Head of State was historically "shared," and would not accredit a representative to one's self). Nonetheless, by the time the change in terminology was effected in 1993, Canada's foreign affairs had been conducted separately from the
United Kingdom in most significant respects for the entire post-war period, or over sixty years since the
Statute of Westminster.
This process was paralleled in other areas, over this period, including establishment of Canada's own
Supreme Court as the
court of last resort, the so-called
Patriation of the Constitution, and
Canadian citizenship (Canadians had been
British subjects, and no citizenship
per se existed until 1947).
See also*
List of Canadian Ministers of Foreign Affairs (1993-)
*
List of Canadian Secretaries of State for External Affairs (1909-1993)
*
List of Canadian Ministers for International Trade (1983-)
*
List of Canadian Ministers for International Cooperation (1996-)
Independent Media Focused on Canadian Foreign Affairs:*
http://www.embassymag.ca Embassy: Canada's Foreign Policy NewsweeklyOfficial website:*
http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca Foreign Affairs and International Trade CanadaGovernment Departments of
Category:Former Canadian federal departments and agenciesCategory:Foreign relations of CanadaCategory:Canadian federal departments and agencies