Abstract

'Middle power' and 'functionalism' were key terms in John Holmes's work. His was perhaps the most articulate expression of the thought behind Canadian diplomacy in the reconstruction of international organization after the Second World War. Although the great powers, and in the first place the United States, were, in Dean Acheson's words, 'present at the creation/ Canada and other middle and smaller powers were, as Holmes underscored, 'also present.' Canada's contribution, in Holmes's thinking, should not be just to claim a place for the assertion of particularist national interests. Beyond such particulars, Canada had an overriding interest in the development of institutions and practices conducive to peace, tranquillity, and orderly adjustment in world politics. Middle powers, of which Canada was an exemplar, could be an important influence to this end because, unlike great powers, they were not suspected of harbouring intentions of domination and because they had resources sufficient to enable them to be functionally effective. This in substance was the Canadian doctrine of function-

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