SOLDES
Jusqu'à -70% sur une sélection d'articles*
Citizens First: A New Blueprint for Canadian Democracy. Citizens First, #1
Par :Formats :
Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
- Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
- Compatible avec une lecture sur liseuses Vivlio
- Pour les liseuses autres que Vivlio, vous devez utiliser le logiciel Adobe Digital Edition. Non compatible avec la lecture sur les liseuses Kindle, Remarkable et Sony
, qui est-ce ?Notre partenaire de plateforme de lecture numérique où vous retrouverez l'ensemble de vos ebooks gratuitement
Pour en savoir plus sur nos ebooks, consultez notre aide en ligne ici
- FormatePub
- ISBN8235860940
- EAN9798235860940
- Date de parution05/05/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Most Canadians know the feeling: you vote, then you wait, and the country goes in a direction you do not recognise. Trust has been the first casualty of a governance style that treats public life as theatre and accountability as a formality. Citizens First asks what it would take to put citizens back at the centre - not rhetorically, but structurally. It sets out a 13-ministry framework for a government that can actually do its work, mandatory citizen-vote triggers that return major spending decisions to the people footing the bill, and a corruption-prevention architecture built into the design rather than bolted on after a scandal.
This is not a political tract, and it is not a call for reform. It is a blueprint for a new system - one built to serve the people who fund it, rather than the ones who run it. Carmelo Bordonaro was born in Canada in 1950 to parents who arrived from Sicily carrying little but hope and the belief that honest work in a new country could build something worth passing on. He carries forward the conviction of his late sister Maria, who believed politics should be for those who need it most.
A blueprint, not a protest. A country is still a thing its citizens can choose to build.
This is not a political tract, and it is not a call for reform. It is a blueprint for a new system - one built to serve the people who fund it, rather than the ones who run it. Carmelo Bordonaro was born in Canada in 1950 to parents who arrived from Sicily carrying little but hope and the belief that honest work in a new country could build something worth passing on. He carries forward the conviction of his late sister Maria, who believed politics should be for those who need it most.
A blueprint, not a protest. A country is still a thing its citizens can choose to build.



