Alberta International and Intergovernmental Relations

Alberta International and Intergovernment Relations (or the Ministry of International and Intergovernment Relations) was the Alberta provincial ministry for international relations and relations with the Canadian federal government and the other provincial governments in Canada. It was dissolved in 2015. Currently, intergovernmental and international relations fall within the portfolio of the Premier of Alberta, with many ministries additionally having intergovernmental relations units of their own.

International and Intergovernment Relations
Agency overview
Formed2 September 1972 (1972-09-02)[1]
Dissolved1 June 2015[2]
JurisdictionProvince of Alberta
Agency executive
Websitehttp://www.international.gov.ab.ca/

Ministers

  • Shirley McClellan, Progressive Conservative, (26 May 1999 – 16 March 2001)
  • Halvar Jonson, Progressive Conservative (16 March 2001 – 25 November 2004)
  • Ed Stelmach, Progressive Conservative, (25 November 2004 – 23 March 2006)
  • Gary Mar, Progressive Conservative, (6 April 2006 – 15 December 2006)
  • Guy Boutilier, Progressive Conservative, (15 December 2006 – 12 March 2008)[lower-alpha 1]
  • Ron Stevens, Progressive Conservative, (12 March 2008 – 15 May 2009)
  • Vacant, under Progressive Conservative Government, (15 May 2009 – 17 September 2009; 125 Days)
  • Len Webber, Progressive Conservative, (17 September 2009 – 15 January 2010)
  • Iris Evans, Progressive Conservative, (15 January 2010 – 12 October 2011)
  • Cal Dallas, Progressive Conservative, (12 October 2011 - (Dissolved 1 June 2015 )[2][lower-alpha 1]
  1. Has held one or more Ministry seats; within the time of being the Alberta International and Intergovernmental Relations Minister

Envoys to the United States

Alberta's envoys to the United States manage the important relationship between Alberta and the US from the Alberta Washington Office within the Canadian embassy. Currently, Gitane De Silva serves as envoy to the United States, or officially as "Senior Representative to the United States". She has held the position since 1 January 2016, taking over from Rob Merrifield, who was appointed as the envoy in September 2014.[3][4] Previously, Gary Mar has also been envoy to the US, he was appointed 27 September 2007. He resigned the post on 16 March 2011 to contest the provincial Conservative party leadership and later became Alberta's envoy to Asia.

Offices abroad

Through the ministry, Alberta maintains offices and provincial envoys at the Canadian embassies or consulates in Washington, D.C., Chicago, Shanghai, Beijing, Hong Kong, Taipei, Berlin, Mexico City, London, Seoul and Tokyo.[5]

gollark: Exactly.
gollark: > The VideoCore IV GPU, in the configuration as found in the Raspberry Pi models, has a theoretical maximum performance of 24 GPFLOS and is therefore very powerful in comparison to the host CPU. The GPU (which is located on the same chip as the CPU) has 12 cores, able of running independent instructions each, supports a SIMD vector-width of 16 elements natively and can access the RAM directly via DMA.So obviously ALL should write code for the VC4.
gollark: Good ideaeae!
gollark: How come it only has CPU architectures? It should run on GPUs too.
gollark: --

References

  1. "Department of International and Intergovernmental Relations fonds". Provincial Archives of Alberta. International & Intergovernmental Relations. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  2. "Rachel Notley sworn in as Alberta premier, reveals cabinet". Bell Media. CBC News Edmonton. 24 May 2015. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  3. "Alberta appoints longtime diplomat as Washington envoy". Edmonton Journal. 23 October 2015. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
  4. "Prentice appoints Conservative MP as Alberta's envoy to U.S." Retrieved 13 April 2018.
  5. "International offices". Retrieved 11 August 2014.

See also


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