fbpx
Wikipedia

Canadian values

Canadian values are the commonly shared ethical and human values of Canadians.[2] The major political parties generally claim explicitly that they uphold these values, but there are no consensus among them about what they are and follow a value pluralism approach.[3]

The Charter of Rights and Freedoms was intended to be a source for Canadian values and national unity.[1]

Canada ranks among the highest in international measurements of government transparency, civil liberties, quality of life, economic freedom, education and gender equality.[4] Canadian Government policies—such as publicly funded health care; higher and more progressive taxation; outlawing capital punishment; strong efforts to eliminate poverty; an emphasis on cultural diversity; strict gun control; the legalization of same-sex marriage, pregnancy terminations, euthanasia and cannabis — are social indicators of the country's political and cultural values.[5][6][7] Canadians identify with the country's institutions of health care, military peacekeeping, the national park system and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.[8][9]

Numerous scholars have tried to identify, measure and compare them with other countries. Baer et al. argue that "Questions of national character and regional culture have long been of interest to both Canadian and American social scientists. The Canadian literature has focussed largely on historical and structural reasons for regional distinctiveness and the possible role of regionalism in undermining a truly national Canadian character or ethos."[10]

International comparisons edit

When he began his study of Canada in the late 1940s, American sociologist Seymour Martin Lipset assumed Canadian and American values were practically identical. Further work led him to discover and to explore the differences. By 1968 he concluded:

Canadian values fall somewhere between those of Britain and the United States, rather than being almost identical with those of the United States, as I had assumed.[11]

Lipset offered some theories of where the two societies differ, and why. That stimulated a large body of scholarship, with other scholars offering their own explanations and criticizing his.[12] As a result, numerous academic studies compare Canadian values and beliefs with those of the United States, and sometimes they add in other countries as well. Lipset has explained his social science methodology:

my conclusions [are] that the variations in North American history and social and geographic environments gave rise to two peoples who differ in significant ways from each other, although as I have repeatedly stressed, they are more similar than different, particularly in comparison with other nations. My chief methodological argument for focusing on Canada in order to learn about the United States is precisely that the two nations have so much in common. Focusing on small differences between countries which are alike can be more fruitful for understanding cultural effects than on large ones among highly similar nations. The former permits holding constant many variables, which the units have in common.[13]

Lipset presented numerous political and economic values on which he scored the U.S. as high and Canada as low. These included: individualism and competitiveness, entrepreneurship and high risk-taking, Utopian moralism, inclination to political crusades, populist or anti-establishment and anti-elite tendencies, a God-and-country nationalism, and intolerance for ideological nonconformity.[14]

Historical origins: Revolution and counterrevolution edit

Lipset argues that:

Many writers seeking to account for value differences between the United States and Canada suggest that they stem in large part from the revolutionary origins of the United States and the counterrevolutionary history of Canada…. The Loyalist emigrés from the American Revolution and Canada's subsequent repeatedly aroused fears of United States encroachment fostered the institutionalization of a counterrevolutionary or conservative ethos.[15][16]

Canadian historian Arthur R. M. Lower argues:

In its new wilderness home and its new aspect of British North Americanism, colonial Toryism made its second attempt to erect on American soil a copy of the English social edifice. From one point of view this is the most significant thing about the Loyalist movement; it withdrew a class concept of life from the south, moved it up north, and gave it a second chance.[17]

Jean Chrétien in his 2010 book My Years as Prime Minister stated the country is fundamentally western and liberal, and the values of nation as "moderation, sharing, tolerance and compassion.”[18] During his presidency, real GDP per capita growth was more than twice that of the period between 1980 and 1996. Canada was the number one country in terms of living standard growth among the G7 nations during that time.[19]

Justin Trudeau after taking office as Prime Minister in 2015 tried to define what it means to be Canadian, saying that Canada lacks a core identity but does have shared values:[20]

There is no core identity, no mainstream in Canada.... There are shared values—openness, respect, compassion, willingness to work hard, to be there for each other, to search for equality and justice. Those qualities are what make us the first post-national state.

Some critics observe that Trudeau's list of values are an evolving one as political circumstances arise, and the idea of post-nationalism by stripping Canada's European History is a pavement to tribalism and race based politics to cement stakeholder groups and appeal to them during elections.[21][22]

Religious factors edit

Religious belief and behaviour are possible candidates in searching for the sources of values. Lipset looked to religion as one of the causes of differing values. He stated:

America remains under the strong influence of the Protestant sects. Its northern neighbor adheres to two churches, Catholic and Anglican, and an ecumenical Protestant denomination (the United Church of Canada) that has moved far from the sectarian origins of its component units toward church-like communitarian values. The overwhelming majority of Canadians (eighty-seven percent) belong to these three mainline denominations. Conservative evangelicals--groups of Baptists, Nazarenes, Pentecostals, Adventists, and so on--constitute only seven percent of Canadians....Clearly, the different religious traditions of the two countries help to explain much of their varying secular behavior and belief.[23]

Hoover and Reimer agree and update Lipset with a plethora of recent survey statistics, while noting that the differences narrowed since 1990, especially in the Prairie provinces. They stress that in the early 21st century 87% of Canadians belonged to cooperative churches, whereas 20% of Americans were Baptists and many more were evangelicals, fundamentalists or members of new religions who tended to behave in a more sectarian fashion; these elements, they argue, made for a higher level of religious and political conservatism and intolerance in the U.S.[24]

Regionalism edit

Baer, Grabb and Johnston argue that:

The pattern of regional cultures is not significantly affected or defined by the national border separating Canada and the United States. Instead...with a few exceptions, the map of regional cultures involves three major segments: a relatively left-liberal Quebec, a more conservative Southern United States, and a comparatively moderate sector that largely encompasses the remainder of the two countries.[2]

Description edit

A 2013 Statistics Canada survey found that an "overwhelming majority" of Canadians shared the values of human rights (with 92% of respondents agreeing that they are a shared Canadian value), respect for the law (92%) and gender equality (91%). There was considerably less agreement among Canadians over whether ethnic and cultural diversity, linguistic duality, and respect for aboriginal culture were also shared Canadian values.[25]

According to the Canadian Index of Well Being at the University of Waterloo, Canadian values include:[26]

  • fairness
  • inclusion
  • democracy
  • economic security
  • safety
  • sustainability
  • diversity
  • equity
  • health

A survey for Citizen's Forum on Canada's Future, 1991 identified the following values:[27]

  • Equality and fairness
  • Consultation and dialogue
  • Accommodation and tolerance
  • Diversity
  • Patriotism[28]
  • Freedom, Peace and Nonviolent change.

Lydia Miljan, a political scientist expressed that core canadian values include “self reliance, limited government, and what are often labelled traditional family values.”[29]

Monarchy edit

Michael Ignatieff, the Liberal leader in 2009–11, in 2004 rooted Canadian values in a historic loyalty to the Crown.[30] Likewise the Conservative Party in 2009 pointed to support for the monarchy of Canada as a core Canadian value.[31]

Shaping foreign policy edit

John Diefenbaker, the Conservative Prime Minister 1957–63, was reluctant to use Canadian values as a criterion for deciding on foreign policies. For example, Jason Zorbas argues that human rights abuses in Argentina and Brazil did not affect relations with those countries.[32]

However his successor, Lester Pearson, the Liberal Prime Minister (1963–68), called in 1967 for a foreign policy "based on Canadian considerations, Canadian values and Canadian interests."[33]

Under Conservative Brian Mulroney, Prime Minister 1984–1993, according to scholar Edward Akuffo:

Canadian foreign policy witnessed the integration of development and security issues and the foreign policy agenda when Canada participated in development projects as well as in peacekeeping operations.... Mulroney's policy initiatives... [marked] the critical juncture for the revamping of 'Canada's moral identity' after the Cold War.... The concept of Canada's moral identity is consistent with what others call the 'branding of Canada' in the international arena through the projection of Canadian values and culture.[34]

Stephen Harper, Prime Minister (2006–2015), tried to shift the existing foreign policy concerns to one were Canada's self-reliance and self-responsibility are prioritized.[35] During 147th Canada Day convention, he said Canada's characteristics and values lie in by being a confident partner, a courageous warrior, and a compassionate neighbor.[36]

Egalitarianism, social equality, and peace edit

While Liberal and Conservative politicians claimed to represent Canadian values, so too did socialists and forces on the left. Ian MacKay argues that, thanks to the long-term political impact of "Rebels, Reds, and Radicals", and allied leftist political elements, "egalitarianism, social equality, and peace... are now often simply referred to... as 'Canadian values.'"[37]

Education edit

Contrasted to the United States, historical educational ideals in Canada have been more elitist, with an emphasis on training church and political elites along British lines.[38][39] In 1960, for example, 9.2 percent of Canadians aged 20 to 24 were enrolled in higher education, compared to 30.2 percent in the United States. Even at the secondary level, enrollments were higher in the United States.[40] According to surveys in the late 1950s of citizens and educators by Lawrence Downey:

Canadians, as a group, assigned considerably higher priority than did Americans to knowledge, scholarly attitudes, creative skills, aesthetic appreciation, and morality, as outcomes of schooling. Americans emphasized physical development, citizenship, patriotism, social skills, and family living much more than did Canadians.[41]

The United States has long emphasized vocational, technical and professional education, while the Canadian schools resist their inclusion.[42] Ivor F. Goodson and Ian R. Dowbiggin have explored the battle over vocational education in London, Ontario, in the 1900–1930 era, a time when American cities were rapidly expanding their vocational offerings. The London Technical and Commercial High School came under heavy attack from the city's social and business elite, who saw the school as a threat to the budget of the city's only academic high school, London Collegiate Institute.[43]

Public universities edit

Most post-secondary institutions in Canada are public universities, which means they are funded by the provincial governments but not owned by the provinces. In contrast, public universities in the United States are owned and controlled by state governments, and there are many private universities, including such schools as Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Chicago and Stanford.[44]

Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms edit

The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, heavily promoted by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, was adopted in 1982. The Charter guarantees certain political rights to Canadian citizens and civil rights of everyone in Canada from the policies and actions of all areas and levels of the government. It is designed to unify Canadians around a set of principles that embody those rights. Even before he entered politics, Trudeau had developed his concept of the charter primarily as an expression of common Canadian values.[45] Trudeau said that, thanks to the Charter, Canada itself could now be defined:

Canada is a society where all people are equal and where they share some fundamental values based upon freedom. The search for this Canadian identity, as much as my philosophical views, had led me to insist on the charter.[46]

As Professor Alan Cairns noted about the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms , "the initial federal government premise was on developing a pan-Canadian identity"'.[47] Pierre Trudeau himself later wrote in his Memoirs (1993) that "Canada itself" could now be defined as a "society where all people are equal and where they share some fundamental values based upon freedom", and that all Canadians could identify with the values of liberty and equality.[48]

Multiculturalism edit

The enormous ethnic variety of the population of Canada in recent decades has led to an emphasis on "multiculturalism."[49] Sociologist N. M. Sussman says, "The tenets of this concept permitted and subtly encouraged the private maintenance of ethnic values while simultaneously insisting on minimal public adherence to Canadian behaviors and to Canadian values." As result, immigrants to Canada are more likely to maintain participatory role by holding to values and attitudes of both the home and of the host culture, compared to substantive roles immigrants of Australia, the United Kingdom, or the United States are able to engage.[50]

Andrew Griffith argues that even though Canada has a history as a white settler colony, he points out that "89 percent of Canadians believe that foreign-born Canadians are just as likely to be good citizens as those born in Canada." This perspective emerged because there was a need for labor from culturally similar sources, but this demand wasn't being met. Canadians today generally view multiculturalism as an integrative force in the country, with the expectation that newcomers will embrace Canadian values and attitudes. Griffith adds that "There are virtually no differences between Canadian-born and foreign-born individuals when it comes to their agreement to abide by Canadian values (70 and 68 percent, respectively)."[51]

In the years following the Second World War, during Canada's early phases of immigration, multiculturalism was not seen as a desirable value. People who were foreign-born and racially different were discouraged from settling in Canada permanently.[52] However, women from England and Scotland faced fewer restrictions, as they were considered 'good stock' who could potentially marry white Canadian men.[53] In a 1947 speech, Liberal Prime Minister Mackenzie King strongly advocated for restrictions on immigration from Asian countries in order to preserve the characteristics of the population and prevent interracial marriages. In 1953, this advocacy led to an immigration law, introduced by the Liberal party, that discriminated against people from culturally dissimilar backgrounds. This racially discriminatory law ranked people from different parts of the world hierarchically, reflecting the legacy of settler-colonization in the country.[54]

This law underwent significant changes in 1962 under Conservative Prime Minister John Diefenbaker, shifting its focus to economic interests and introducing universal criteria for admission. In 1966, Lester B. Pearson's Liberal government further emphasized these changes through the White Paper on Immigration, which included an anti-discrimination clause onto the immigration law.[55] The new immigration act, aligned with this new direction, came into effect in 1976. However, in 1987, the now-disbanded Reform Party of Canada attempted to revive Prime Minister King's perspective of maintaining the ethnic makeup of the country. The 1993 federal election saw a lack of consensus regarding multiculturalism policy and its symbolism, which continues into the contemporary decade with the enduring popular assumption that 'real' Canadians are white and originally of European descent.[56]

Gender equality and the role of women edit

Citing Canadian values, Canadian courts have rejected assertions that violence against women is in some circumstances acceptable because of one's religious and cultural beliefs. In the R v. Humaid decision, Justice Rutherford of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice[57] stated:

Wife-murder may seem especially repugnant to our Canadian value fabric when cultural considerations that are contrary to our Canadian values figure prominently. However it must be borne in mind here that the Court of Appeal found "no air of reality" to the applicant's claim that religious and cultural beliefs resulted in his being severely provoked by what his wife said to him.

Publicly funded health care edit

Universal access to publicly funded health services "is often considered by Canadians as a fundamental value that ensures national health care insurance for everyone wherever they live in the country."[58] Survey research in the 1990s showed that:

When asked, "What makes you most proud of Canada?" one in three Canadians volunteered, "Our health-care system." When asked a reversed version of the American health-care scenario, "Would you support political union [with the U.S.] if it meant a private health-care system?" The reply was a resounding "no."[59]

Invocation edit

Memorials edit

The idea of Canadian values has been used for the dedication of memorials, like the Memorial to the Victims of Communism: Canada, a Land of Refuge, in Ottawa. It construction was meant to bring the suffering of "the millions of victims of Communism" into the public's consciousness. Many of these victims fled to Canada "seeking peace, order, democracy, and liberty."[60] The memorial is expected to be completed in 2018.

According to Ms. Mélanie Joly, the Minister of Canadian Heritage, "Commemorative monuments play a key role in reflecting the character, identity, history and values of Canadians".[61] She complained that the previous Harper government had made the project too controversial. Her new Liberal government has moved the site and cut its budget.[62]

Quebec edit

Charter of the French Language edit

The Charter of the French Language (French: La charte de la langue française, also known as loi 101 [Bill 101]) is legislation that makes French the official language of Quebec.[63] Among other things, the Charter requires:

  • all administrative government documents to be drafted and published in French
  • the language of instruction from kindergarten to secondary school to be French

Quebec Charter of Values edit

The Charter of Values (French: Charte de la laïcité or Charte des valeurs québécoises, also known as Bill 60)[64] was proposed legislation tabled by the governing Parti Québecois in August 2013 but which the National Assembly of Quebec did not pass by its dissolution in March 2014.[65] It would have banned public sector employees from wearing conspicuous religious symbols. Article 5 in Chapter II stated:

In the exercise of their functions, personnel members of public bodies must not wear objects such as headgear, clothing, jewellery or other adornments which, by their conspicuous nature, overtly indicate a religious affiliation.[66]

Justin Trudeau, who has been a champion of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (French: La Charte canadienne des droits et libertés), opposed the proposed Quebec Charter of Values. He stated, "Prohibiting someone from wearing a hijab or a kippah is not compatible with Quebec and Canadian values."[67] Bill 60 was less prominent and of no value during COVID-19.

Distinct society edit

Proposed changes to the Canadian Constitution included adding the phrase "distinct society" to the Constitution Act, 1867, to recognize the uniqueness of Quebec as compared with the rest of Canada.[68][69]

Controversy edit

Defining Canadian values is problematic if the goal is to identify values that are universally held. According to Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reporter Neil Macdonald, there are "precious few notions that can accurately be described as universally held Canadian values."[70] According to journalist Lysiane Gagnon, Canadians "don't share common values." She notes that, while many ideas—such as medicare, bilingualism, and multiculturalism—are sometimes characterized as Canadian values, "many Canadians are against all or some of these."[71] Canadian sociologist Vic Satzewich has argued that "coming up with a universal set of our nation's values would be impossible."[72]

The Institute for Canadian Values sponsored advertisements against the teaching of certain sexual education topics in the Ontario school curriculum and discriminated against transsexual, transgender, and intersex persons. The advertisements were controversial and quickly discontinued.[73]

Barbaric cultural practices issue edit

Certain cultural practices were called "Barbaric" and made illegal in 2015, when the Zero Tolerance for Barbaric Cultural Practices Act was enacted by the Canadian federal government.[74][75][76] The Act criminalizes certain conduct related to early and forced marriage ceremonies, as well as removing a child from Canada for the purpose of such marriages.[77]

In the 2015 general election Conservatives had pitched their policy "as an issue of Canadian values.... The Conservatives expanded the issue, announcing a proposed RCMP hotline that would allow Canadians to report the existence of 'barbaric cultural practices' in the country." These targeted practices included polygamy, forced marriage and early marriage (i.e. child marriage).[78]

Nationalism and its potential adverse impact on foreign policy edit

Scholars have asked whether shared values underpin national identity.[79] Denis Stairs links the concept of Canadian values with nationalism. Stairs, the McCulloch Professor in Political Science at Dalhousie University, has argued that there is indeed an intense widespread belief in the existence of Canadian values, but says that belief can itself be harmful. He contends that:

[Canadians typically] think of themselves not as others are, but as morally superior. They believe, in particular, that they subscribe to a distinctive set of values—Canadian values—and that those values are special in the sense of being unusually virtuous. A prominent effect of that belief is that it has put them in serious danger of misunderstanding the true origins of their behaviour, on the one hand, and of doing significant damage to the effectiveness of their diplomacy, both next door and overseas, on the other.[80]

Stairs also argues that, "first billing is usually given in received lists of Canadian values to 'multiculturalism'... as a means of challenging the premises of nationalism in Quebec."[81]

Screening immigrants for anti-Canadian values edit

Canadian politicians have proposed rejecting immigrants who have anti-Canadian values such as:

  • intolerance toward other religions, cultures, genders, and sexual orientations
  • reluctance to embrace Canadian freedoms[82]

Kellie Leitch, a candidate for leadership candidate for the Conservative Party of Canada's 2017 Convention, was a vocal proponent of such government screening.[82]

In 2016, an Environics public opinion poll found that 54 per cent of Canadians agree that "there are too many immigrants coming into this country who are not adopting Canadian values."[83][84]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sniderman, Paul M.; Fletcher, Joseph F.; Tetlock, Philip E. (1996). The Clash of Rights: Liberty, Equality, and Legitimacy in Pluralist Democracy. Yale University Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-300-06981-5.
  2. ^ a b Douglas Baer, Edward Grabb, and William Johnston, "National character, regional culture, and the values of Canadians and Americans." Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue canadienne de sociologie 30.1 (1993): 13-36.
  3. ^ Neil Macdonald (September 13, 2016). "A very short list of Canadian values: Neil Macdonald". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  4. ^ "Provincial and Territorial Ranking". www.conferenceboard.ca.
  5. ^ Hollifield, James; Martin, Philip L.; Orrenius, Pia (2014). Controlling Immigration: A Global Perspective, Third Edition. Stanford University Press. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-8047-8735-2.
  6. ^ Bricker, Darrell; Wright, John; Ipsos-Reid (Firm) (2005). What Canadians think- about almost- everything. Doubleday Canada. pp. 8–20. ISBN 978-0-385-65985-7.
  7. ^ "Examples of Charter-related cases - Canada's System of Justice". Department of Justice - Government of Canada. 2018.
  8. ^ The Environics Institute (2010). (PDF). Queen's University. p. 4 (PDF page 8). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 4, 2016. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  9. ^ (PDF). Nanos Research. October 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 5, 2017. Retrieved February 1, 2017.
  10. ^ Baer, Grabb, and Johnston, "National character, regional culture, and the values of Canadians and Americans." (1993) p 13.
  11. ^ S. M. Lipset, Agrarian Socialism: The Cooperative Commonwealth Federation in Saskatchewan, a Study in Political Sociology (1950; revised edition 1968) p xv
  12. ^ Doug Baer, et al. "The values of Canadians and Americans: A critical analysis and reassessment." Social Forces 68.3 (1990): 693-713.
  13. ^ Lipset, "Defining Moments and Recurring Myths: A Reply" Canadian Review of Sociology & Anthropology (2001) 38#1 pp 97-100.
  14. ^ Seymour M. Lipset, "The Canadian Identity," International Journal of Canadian Studies (2006), Issue 33, pp 83-98.
  15. ^ S.M. Lipset, Revolution and Counterrevolution: Change and persistence in social structures (2nd ed, 1970) p. 55.
  16. ^ J.M.S. Careless, Canada: A story of challenge (Cambridge UP, 1963), pp 111-13.
  17. ^ A.R.M. Lower, From Colony to Nation (1946), p 114.
  18. ^ Jean Chretien (18 June 2010). My Years as Prime Minister. Knopf Canada. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-307-36872-0.
  19. ^ "Economic Outlook No. 77". stats.oecd.org. Statistics Canada. 2005.
  20. ^ Quoted in Guy Lawson, "Trudeau's Canada, Again: With support from President Obama and the legacy of his father on his side, Justin Trudeau sets out to redefine what it means to be Canadian," New York Times Dec. 8, 2015
  21. ^ "MALCOLM: Raced-based politics natural outcome of Trudeau's 'postnational state'".
  22. ^ "Philip Cross: Do 'Canadian values' support innovation?".
  23. ^ Lipset, Continental Divide (1990) PP 88-89.
  24. ^ Dennis R. Hoover and Samuel H. Reimer. "Things That Make for a Peaceable Kingdom: An Overview of Christianity and 'Cooperativeness' across the Continental Divide." Journal of Ecumenical Studies 41.2 (2004): 205.
  25. ^ Canada, Government of Canada, Statistics (October 2015). "Canadian Identity, 2013".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  26. ^ "Reflecting Canadian values". Canadian Index of Well Being. 2012-06-27. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  27. ^ Diane Symbaluk; Tami Bereska. Sociology in Action, Canadian Edition, 2nd ed. Nelson Education. pp. 87–88. ISBN 978-0-17-672841-0.
  28. ^ Nicholas Kohler, “Canadians Feel like They’re on Top of the World,” Macleans.ca, retrieved October 13, 2017.
  29. ^ "Philip Cross: Do 'Canadian values' support innovation?".
  30. ^ D. Michael Jackson (2013). The Crown and Canadian Federalism. Dundurn. pp. 18–19. ISBN 9781459709898.
  31. ^ Shibao Guo; Lloyd Wong (2015). Revisiting Multiculturalism in Canada: Theories, Policies and Debates. SensePublishers. p. 63. ISBN 9789463002080.
  32. ^ Jason Gregory Zorbas (2011). Diefenbaker and Latin America: The Pursuit of Canadian Autonomy. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 115. ISBN 9781443832816.
  33. ^ Robert A. Spencer (1958). Canadian Foreign Policy, Conservative Style. Canadian Institute of International Affairs. p. 14.
  34. ^ Edward Ansah Akuffo (2016). Canadian Foreign Policy in Africa: Regional Approaches to Peace, Security, and Development. Taylor & Francis. p. 41. ISBN 9781317169987.
  35. ^ Gecelovsky, Paul (2020). "From humane to responsible: Stephen Harper, narrative and Canadian foreign policy". Canadian Foreign Policy Journal. 26 (3): 239–256. doi:10.1080/11926422.2019.1684962. S2CID 211379781.
  36. ^ "Canada marks the Confederation countdown as it celebrates 147th birthday". July 2014.
  37. ^ Ian McKay (2005). Rebels, Reds, Radicals: Rethinking Canada's Left History. Between The Lines. p. 181. ISBN 9781896357973.
  38. ^ Seymour Martin Lipset, Revolution and Counterrevolution (2nd ed, 1970) pp 40-44
  39. ^ Craig Crawford and James Curtis. "English Canadian-American differences in value orientations: Survey comparisons bearing on Lipset's thesis." Studies in Comparative International Development 14.3-4 (1979): 23-44.
  40. ^ Richard A. Wanner, "Educational inequality: Trends in twentieth-century Canada and the United States." Comparative Social Research 9.1 (1986): 986+
  41. ^ Lawrence William Downey, The task of public education: The perceptions of people (Midwest Administration Center, University of Chicago, 1960), Quoted in Lipset, Revolution and Counterrevolution, p 42.
  42. ^ Lipset, Revolution and Counterrevolution p 41
  43. ^ Ivor F. Goodson and Ian R. Dowbiggin, "Vocational education and school reform: the case of the London (Canada) Technical School, 1900-1930" History of Education Review (1991) 20#1: 39–60.
  44. ^ Theresa Shanahan; et al. (2016). The Handbook of Canadian Higher Education. MQUP. pp. 49–52. ISBN 9781553395058.
  45. ^ Gerald Kernerman; Philip Resnick (2005). Insiders and Outsiders: Alan Cairns and the Reshaping of Canadian Citizenship. UBC Press. p. 171. ISBN 9780774810692.
  46. ^ Pierre Elliott Trudeau (1993). Memoirs. McClelland & Stewart. p. 323. ISBN 0771085885.
  47. ^ Saunders, Philip (April 2002). . CBC News Online. CBC/Radio-Canada. Archived from the original on March 7, 2006. Retrieved March 17, 2006.
  48. ^ Trudeau, P.E. (1993). Memoirs. McClelland & Stewart. p. 323. ISBN 978-0-7710-8588-8.
  49. ^ James Hollifield; Philip L. Martin; Pia Orrenius (2014). Controlling Immigration: A Global Perspective, Third Edition. Stanford University Press. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-8047-8735-2.
  50. ^ Chan Kwok-bun (2012). International Handbook of Chinese Families. Springer. p. 59. ISBN 9781461402664.
  51. ^ Griffith, Andrew (2015). Multiculturalism In Canada: Evidence and Anecdote. Lulu.com. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-9880640-9-6.
  52. ^ Mandell, Nancy, ed. (2000). "Families of Native Peoples, Immigrants and People of Colour". Canadian Families: Diversity, Conflict, and Change. Toronto: Harcourt Brace Canada. ISBN 978-0-7747-3629-9.
  53. ^ Bakan, Abigail B.; Stasiulis, Daiva K. (1995). "Making the Match: Domestic Placement Agencies and the Racialization of Women's Household Work". Signs. 20 (2): 303–335. doi:10.1086/494976. ISSN 0097-9740. JSTOR 3174951. S2CID 143829248.
  54. ^ Rawlyk, G. A. (1962). "Canada's Immigration Policy, 1945-1962". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  55. ^ White paper on immigration. Canada, Manpower and Immigration. Ottawa: Queen's Printer. 1966.
  56. ^ Bickerton, James; Gagnon, Alain (2009-01-01). "The Politics of Race and Identity: Multiculturalism as a Contested Arena". Canadian Politics. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-0121-5.
  57. ^ R. v. Humaid, 2015 O.N.S.C. 5345 (CanLII), para. 24, retrieved on 2019-12-14.
  58. ^ "The Health of Canadians – The Federal Role". 17.1 Universality: Parliament of Canada. Retrieved 5 January 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  59. ^ Ronald F. Inglehart; et al. (1996). The North American Trajectory: Cultural, Economic, and Political Ties Between the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Transaction Publishers. p. 146. ISBN 9781412829816.
  60. ^ "Memorial to the Victims of Communism". Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  61. ^ . Government of Canada. 2016-08-31. Archived from the original on 2016-02-03. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  62. ^ Don Butler, "Victims of communism memorial to be moved, Joly announces," 00 Ottawa Citizen December 17, 2015
  63. ^ Richard Y. Bourhis, ed., Conflict and Language Planning in Quebec (1984).
  64. ^ Projet de loi № 60, Charte affirmant les valeurs de laïcité et de neutralité religieuse de l’État ainsi que d’égalité entre les femmes et les hommes et encadrant les demandes d’accommodement, 1ère Session, 40ème Législature, Québec, 2013.
  65. ^ Charles Tessier and Éric Montigny. "Untangling myths and facts: Who supported the Québec Charter of Values?" French Politics 14.2 (2016): 272–285.
  66. ^ Trygve Ugland, "The Quebec Charter of Values: A Solution in Search of Problems." Journal of Eastern Townships Studies 42 (2014): 11+ online
  67. ^ Huguette Young (2016). Justin Trudeau: The Natural Heir. Dundurn. p. 129. ISBN 9781459735736.
  68. ^ Michael Burgess, "Ethnicity, nationalism and identity in Canada‐Quebec relations: The case of Quebec's 'distinct society'." Journal of Commonwealth & Comparative Politics 34.2 (1996): 46-64.
  69. ^ Richard Johnston and Andre Blais. "Meech Lake and Mass Politics: The'Distinct Society'Clause." Canadian Public Policy/Analyse de Politiques (1988): S25-S42. online
  70. ^ "A very short list of Canadian values: Neil Macdonald".
  71. ^ Gagnon, Lysiane. "Citizenship Rules for Homebodies." The Globe and Mail, Dec 19, 1998.
  72. ^ "Kellie Leitch misses the point about immigration".
  73. ^ Heather Shipley, "Queering Institutions?: Sexual Identity in Public Education in a Canadian Context," Feminist Teacher 23.3 (2013): 196–210.
  74. ^ "Barbaric Cultural Practices Act". Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  75. ^ Ashley Csanady (June 17, 2015). "'Barbaric Cultural Practices' bill to criminalize forced marriage, tackle 'honour killings' passes final vote". National Post. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  76. ^ "Zero Tolerance for Barbaric Cultural Practices Act". Government of Canada. Retrieved 1 January 2017.
  77. ^ . News.gc.ca. 2016-08-31. Archived from the original on 2015-06-23. Retrieved 2017-01-01.
  78. ^ Jon H. Pammett; Christopher Dornan (2016). The Canadian Federal Election of 2015. Dundurn. p. 220. ISBN 9781459733367.
  79. ^ Alisa Henderson and Nicola McEwen. "Do shared values underpin national identity? Examining the role of values in national identity in Canada and the United Kingdom." National Identities 7.2 (2005): 173-191.
  80. ^ Denis Stairs, "Myths, Morals, and Reality in Canadian Foreign Policy" International Journal 58#2 (2003) pp. 239-256 in JSTOR
  81. ^ Stairs, "Myths, morals, and reality in Canadian foreign policy," p 247
  82. ^ a b Bruce Campion-Smith (September 10, 2016). "Canadians favour screening would-be immigrants for 'anti-Canadian' values, poll shows". Toronto Star. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  83. ^ "Jedwab: Politicians should show some honesty on 'Canadian values' pitch". Ottawa Citizen. December 11, 2016. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  84. ^ Angus Reid (October 4, 2016). "Canadians aren't as accepting as we think — and we can't ignore it, writes Angus Reid". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. p. English. Retrieved 31 December 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Alston, Jon P., Theresa M. Morris, and Arnold Vedlitz. "Comparing Canadian and American values: New evidence from national surveys." American Review of Canadian Studies 26.3 (1996): 301-314.
  • Baer, Doug, et al. "The values of Canadians and Americans: A critical analysis and reassessment." Social Forces 68.3 (1990): 693-713.
  • Baer, Douglas, Edward Grabb, and William Johnston. "National character, regional culture, and the values of Canadians and Americans." Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue canadienne de sociologie 30.1 (1993): 13-36.
  • Baer, Douglas, et al. "Respect for authority in Canada, the United States, Great Britain and Australia." Sociological Focus 28.2 (1995): 177-195.
  • Basil, Debra Z. "Charitable donations as a reflection of national values: An exploratory comparison of Canada and the United States." Journal of Nonprofit & Public Sector Marketing 18.1 (2007): 1-19.
  • Hoover, Dennis R., and Samuel H. Reimer. "Things That Make for a Peaceable Kingdom: An Overview of Christianity and 'Cooperativeness' across the Continental Divide." Journal of Ecumenical Studies 41.2 (2004): 205+ online 2017-01-07 at the Wayback Machine
  • Hoover, Dennis R. et al. "Evangelical Protestantism Meets the Continental Divide: Moral and Economic Conservatism in the United States and Canada," Political Research Quarterly 55#3 (June, 2002): 351-374.
  • Lipset, S.M. Continental divide: The values and institutions of the United States and Canada (1991).
  • Ivan Katchanovski, Neil Nevitte, and Stanley Rothman. "Race, Gender, and Affirmative Action Attitudes in American and Canadian Universities." The Canadian Journal of Higher Education 45.4 (2015): 18.
  • Moon, C. David, Nicholas P. Lovrich Jr, and John C. Pierce. "Political culture in Canada and the United States: comparing social trust, self-esteem, and political liberalism in major Canadian and American Cities." Social science quarterly (2000): 826-836. in jSTOR

External links edit

  • Canadian Index of Well Being - University of Waterloo
  • - Nanos Research

canadian, values, commonly, shared, ethical, human, values, canadians, major, political, parties, generally, claim, explicitly, that, they, uphold, these, values, there, consensus, among, them, about, what, they, follow, value, pluralism, approach, charter, ri. Canadian values are the commonly shared ethical and human values of Canadians 2 The major political parties generally claim explicitly that they uphold these values but there are no consensus among them about what they are and follow a value pluralism approach 3 The Charter of Rights and Freedoms was intended to be a source for Canadian values and national unity 1 Canada ranks among the highest in international measurements of government transparency civil liberties quality of life economic freedom education and gender equality 4 Canadian Government policies such as publicly funded health care higher and more progressive taxation outlawing capital punishment strong efforts to eliminate poverty an emphasis on cultural diversity strict gun control the legalization of same sex marriage pregnancy terminations euthanasia and cannabis are social indicators of the country s political and cultural values 5 6 7 Canadians identify with the country s institutions of health care military peacekeeping the national park system and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms 8 9 Numerous scholars have tried to identify measure and compare them with other countries Baer et al argue that Questions of national character and regional culture have long been of interest to both Canadian and American social scientists The Canadian literature has focussed largely on historical and structural reasons for regional distinctiveness and the possible role of regionalism in undermining a truly national Canadian character or ethos 10 Contents 1 International comparisons 1 1 Historical origins Revolution and counterrevolution 1 2 Religious factors 1 3 Regionalism 2 Description 2 1 Monarchy 2 2 Shaping foreign policy 2 3 Egalitarianism social equality and peace 2 4 Education 2 4 1 Public universities 2 5 Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms 2 6 Multiculturalism 2 7 Gender equality and the role of women 2 8 Publicly funded health care 3 Invocation 3 1 Memorials 4 Quebec 4 1 Charter of the French Language 4 2 Quebec Charter of Values 4 3 Distinct society 5 Controversy 5 1 Barbaric cultural practices issue 5 2 Nationalism and its potential adverse impact on foreign policy 5 3 Screening immigrants for anti Canadian values 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksInternational comparisons editFurther information International rankings of Canada When he began his study of Canada in the late 1940s American sociologist Seymour Martin Lipset assumed Canadian and American values were practically identical Further work led him to discover and to explore the differences By 1968 he concluded Canadian values fall somewhere between those of Britain and the United States rather than being almost identical with those of the United States as I had assumed 11 Lipset offered some theories of where the two societies differ and why That stimulated a large body of scholarship with other scholars offering their own explanations and criticizing his 12 As a result numerous academic studies compare Canadian values and beliefs with those of the United States and sometimes they add in other countries as well Lipset has explained his social science methodology my conclusions are that the variations in North American history and social and geographic environments gave rise to two peoples who differ in significant ways from each other although as I have repeatedly stressed they are more similar than different particularly in comparison with other nations My chief methodological argument for focusing on Canada in order to learn about the United States is precisely that the two nations have so much in common Focusing on small differences between countries which are alike can be more fruitful for understanding cultural effects than on large ones among highly similar nations The former permits holding constant many variables which the units have in common 13 Lipset presented numerous political and economic values on which he scored the U S as high and Canada as low These included individualism and competitiveness entrepreneurship and high risk taking Utopian moralism inclination to political crusades populist or anti establishment and anti elite tendencies a God and country nationalism and intolerance for ideological nonconformity 14 Historical origins Revolution and counterrevolution edit Lipset argues that Many writers seeking to account for value differences between the United States and Canada suggest that they stem in large part from the revolutionary origins of the United States and the counterrevolutionary history of Canada The Loyalist emigres from the American Revolution and Canada s subsequent repeatedly aroused fears of United States encroachment fostered the institutionalization of a counterrevolutionary or conservative ethos 15 16 Canadian historian Arthur R M Lower argues In its new wilderness home and its new aspect of British North Americanism colonial Toryism made its second attempt to erect on American soil a copy of the English social edifice From one point of view this is the most significant thing about the Loyalist movement it withdrew a class concept of life from the south moved it up north and gave it a second chance 17 Jean Chretien in his 2010 book My Years as Prime Minister stated the country is fundamentally western and liberal and the values of nation as moderation sharing tolerance and compassion 18 During his presidency real GDP per capita growth was more than twice that of the period between 1980 and 1996 Canada was the number one country in terms of living standard growth among the G7 nations during that time 19 Justin Trudeau after taking office as Prime Minister in 2015 tried to define what it means to be Canadian saying that Canada lacks a core identity but does have shared values 20 There is no core identity no mainstream in Canada There are shared values openness respect compassion willingness to work hard to be there for each other to search for equality and justice Those qualities are what make us the first post national state dd Some critics observe that Trudeau s list of values are an evolving one as political circumstances arise and the idea of post nationalism by stripping Canada s European History is a pavement to tribalism and race based politics to cement stakeholder groups and appeal to them during elections 21 22 Religious factors edit Religious belief and behaviour are possible candidates in searching for the sources of values Lipset looked to religion as one of the causes of differing values He stated America remains under the strong influence of the Protestant sects Its northern neighbor adheres to two churches Catholic and Anglican and an ecumenical Protestant denomination the United Church of Canada that has moved far from the sectarian origins of its component units toward church like communitarian values The overwhelming majority of Canadians eighty seven percent belong to these three mainline denominations Conservative evangelicals groups of Baptists Nazarenes Pentecostals Adventists and so on constitute only seven percent of Canadians Clearly the different religious traditions of the two countries help to explain much of their varying secular behavior and belief 23 Hoover and Reimer agree and update Lipset with a plethora of recent survey statistics while noting that the differences narrowed since 1990 especially in the Prairie provinces They stress that in the early 21st century 87 of Canadians belonged to cooperative churches whereas 20 of Americans were Baptists and many more were evangelicals fundamentalists or members of new religions who tended to behave in a more sectarian fashion these elements they argue made for a higher level of religious and political conservatism and intolerance in the U S 24 Regionalism edit Baer Grabb and Johnston argue that The pattern of regional cultures is not significantly affected or defined by the national border separating Canada and the United States Instead with a few exceptions the map of regional cultures involves three major segments a relatively left liberal Quebec a more conservative Southern United States and a comparatively moderate sector that largely encompasses the remainder of the two countries 2 Description editA 2013 Statistics Canada survey found that an overwhelming majority of Canadians shared the values of human rights with 92 of respondents agreeing that they are a shared Canadian value respect for the law 92 and gender equality 91 There was considerably less agreement among Canadians over whether ethnic and cultural diversity linguistic duality and respect for aboriginal culture were also shared Canadian values 25 According to the Canadian Index of Well Being at the University of Waterloo Canadian values include 26 fairness inclusion democracy economic security safety sustainability diversity equity health A survey for Citizen s Forum on Canada s Future 1991 identified the following values 27 Equality and fairness Consultation and dialogue Accommodation and tolerance Diversity Patriotism 28 Freedom Peace and Nonviolent change Lydia Miljan a political scientist expressed that core canadian values include self reliance limited government and what are often labelled traditional family values 29 Monarchy edit Main article Monarchism in Canada Michael Ignatieff the Liberal leader in 2009 11 in 2004 rooted Canadian values in a historic loyalty to the Crown 30 Likewise the Conservative Party in 2009 pointed to support for the monarchy of Canada as a core Canadian value 31 Shaping foreign policy edit John Diefenbaker the Conservative Prime Minister 1957 63 was reluctant to use Canadian values as a criterion for deciding on foreign policies For example Jason Zorbas argues that human rights abuses in Argentina and Brazil did not affect relations with those countries 32 However his successor Lester Pearson the Liberal Prime Minister 1963 68 called in 1967 for a foreign policy based on Canadian considerations Canadian values and Canadian interests 33 Under Conservative Brian Mulroney Prime Minister 1984 1993 according to scholar Edward Akuffo Canadian foreign policy witnessed the integration of development and security issues and the foreign policy agenda when Canada participated in development projects as well as in peacekeeping operations Mulroney s policy initiatives marked the critical juncture for the revamping of Canada s moral identity after the Cold War The concept of Canada s moral identity is consistent with what others call the branding of Canada in the international arena through the projection of Canadian values and culture 34 Stephen Harper Prime Minister 2006 2015 tried to shift the existing foreign policy concerns to one were Canada s self reliance and self responsibility are prioritized 35 During 147th Canada Day convention he said Canada s characteristics and values lie in by being a confident partner a courageous warrior and a compassionate neighbor 36 Egalitarianism social equality and peace edit While Liberal and Conservative politicians claimed to represent Canadian values so too did socialists and forces on the left Ian MacKay argues that thanks to the long term political impact of Rebels Reds and Radicals and allied leftist political elements egalitarianism social equality and peace are now often simply referred to as Canadian values 37 Education edit See also Education in Canada Contrasted to the United States historical educational ideals in Canada have been more elitist with an emphasis on training church and political elites along British lines 38 39 In 1960 for example 9 2 percent of Canadians aged 20 to 24 were enrolled in higher education compared to 30 2 percent in the United States Even at the secondary level enrollments were higher in the United States 40 According to surveys in the late 1950s of citizens and educators by Lawrence Downey Canadians as a group assigned considerably higher priority than did Americans to knowledge scholarly attitudes creative skills aesthetic appreciation and morality as outcomes of schooling Americans emphasized physical development citizenship patriotism social skills and family living much more than did Canadians 41 The United States has long emphasized vocational technical and professional education while the Canadian schools resist their inclusion 42 Ivor F Goodson and Ian R Dowbiggin have explored the battle over vocational education in London Ontario in the 1900 1930 era a time when American cities were rapidly expanding their vocational offerings The London Technical and Commercial High School came under heavy attack from the city s social and business elite who saw the school as a threat to the budget of the city s only academic high school London Collegiate Institute 43 Public universities edit Most post secondary institutions in Canada are public universities which means they are funded by the provincial governments but not owned by the provinces In contrast public universities in the United States are owned and controlled by state governments and there are many private universities including such schools as Harvard Yale Princeton Chicago and Stanford 44 Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms edit Main article Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms heavily promoted by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau was adopted in 1982 The Charter guarantees certain political rights to Canadian citizens and civil rights of everyone in Canada from the policies and actions of all areas and levels of the government It is designed to unify Canadians around a set of principles that embody those rights Even before he entered politics Trudeau had developed his concept of the charter primarily as an expression of common Canadian values 45 Trudeau said that thanks to the Charter Canada itself could now be defined Canada is a society where all people are equal and where they share some fundamental values based upon freedom The search for this Canadian identity as much as my philosophical views had led me to insist on the charter 46 As Professor Alan Cairns noted about the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms the initial federal government premise was on developing a pan Canadian identity 47 Pierre Trudeau himself later wrote in his Memoirs 1993 that Canada itself could now be defined as a society where all people are equal and where they share some fundamental values based upon freedom and that all Canadians could identify with the values of liberty and equality 48 Multiculturalism edit Main article Multiculturalism in Canada The enormous ethnic variety of the population of Canada in recent decades has led to an emphasis on multiculturalism 49 Sociologist N M Sussman says The tenets of this concept permitted and subtly encouraged the private maintenance of ethnic values while simultaneously insisting on minimal public adherence to Canadian behaviors and to Canadian values As result immigrants to Canada are more likely to maintain participatory role by holding to values and attitudes of both the home and of the host culture compared to substantive roles immigrants of Australia the United Kingdom or the United States are able to engage 50 Andrew Griffith argues that even though Canada has a history as a white settler colony he points out that 89 percent of Canadians believe that foreign born Canadians are just as likely to be good citizens as those born in Canada This perspective emerged because there was a need for labor from culturally similar sources but this demand wasn t being met Canadians today generally view multiculturalism as an integrative force in the country with the expectation that newcomers will embrace Canadian values and attitudes Griffith adds that There are virtually no differences between Canadian born and foreign born individuals when it comes to their agreement to abide by Canadian values 70 and 68 percent respectively 51 In the years following the Second World War during Canada s early phases of immigration multiculturalism was not seen as a desirable value People who were foreign born and racially different were discouraged from settling in Canada permanently 52 However women from England and Scotland faced fewer restrictions as they were considered good stock who could potentially marry white Canadian men 53 In a 1947 speech Liberal Prime Minister Mackenzie King strongly advocated for restrictions on immigration from Asian countries in order to preserve the characteristics of the population and prevent interracial marriages In 1953 this advocacy led to an immigration law introduced by the Liberal party that discriminated against people from culturally dissimilar backgrounds This racially discriminatory law ranked people from different parts of the world hierarchically reflecting the legacy of settler colonization in the country 54 This law underwent significant changes in 1962 under Conservative Prime Minister John Diefenbaker shifting its focus to economic interests and introducing universal criteria for admission In 1966 Lester B Pearson s Liberal government further emphasized these changes through the White Paper on Immigration which included an anti discrimination clause onto the immigration law 55 The new immigration act aligned with this new direction came into effect in 1976 However in 1987 the now disbanded Reform Party of Canada attempted to revive Prime Minister King s perspective of maintaining the ethnic makeup of the country The 1993 federal election saw a lack of consensus regarding multiculturalism policy and its symbolism which continues into the contemporary decade with the enduring popular assumption that real Canadians are white and originally of European descent 56 Gender equality and the role of women edit Citing Canadian values Canadian courts have rejected assertions that violence against women is in some circumstances acceptable because of one s religious and cultural beliefs In the R v Humaid decision Justice Rutherford of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice 57 stated Wife murder may seem especially repugnant to our Canadian value fabric when cultural considerations that are contrary to our Canadian values figure prominently However it must be borne in mind here that the Court of Appeal found no air of reality to the applicant s claim that religious and cultural beliefs resulted in his being severely provoked by what his wife said to him Publicly funded health care edit Main article Healthcare in Canada Universal access to publicly funded health services is often considered by Canadians as a fundamental value that ensures national health care insurance for everyone wherever they live in the country 58 Survey research in the 1990s showed that When asked What makes you most proud of Canada one in three Canadians volunteered Our health care system When asked a reversed version of the American health care scenario Would you support political union with the U S if it meant a private health care system The reply was a resounding no 59 Invocation editMemorials edit The idea of Canadian values has been used for the dedication of memorials like the Memorial to the Victims of Communism Canada a Land of Refuge in Ottawa It construction was meant to bring the suffering of the millions of victims of Communism into the public s consciousness Many of these victims fled to Canada seeking peace order democracy and liberty 60 The memorial is expected to be completed in 2018 According to Ms Melanie Joly the Minister of Canadian Heritage Commemorative monuments play a key role in reflecting the character identity history and values of Canadians 61 She complained that the previous Harper government had made the project too controversial Her new Liberal government has moved the site and cut its budget 62 Quebec editCharter of the French Language edit The Charter of the French Language French La charte de la langue francaise also known as loi 101 Bill 101 is legislation that makes French the official language of Quebec 63 Among other things the Charter requires all administrative government documents to be drafted and published in French the language of instruction from kindergarten to secondary school to be FrenchQuebec Charter of Values edit The Charter of Values French Charte de la laicite or Charte des valeurs quebecoises also known as Bill 60 64 was proposed legislation tabled by the governing Parti Quebecois in August 2013 but which the National Assembly of Quebec did not pass by its dissolution in March 2014 65 It would have banned public sector employees from wearing conspicuous religious symbols Article 5 in Chapter II stated In the exercise of their functions personnel members of public bodies must not wear objects such as headgear clothing jewellery or other adornments which by their conspicuous nature overtly indicate a religious affiliation 66 Justin Trudeau who has been a champion of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms French La Charte canadienne des droits et libertes opposed the proposed Quebec Charter of Values He stated Prohibiting someone from wearing a hijab or a kippah is not compatible with Quebec and Canadian values 67 Bill 60 was less prominent and of no value during COVID 19 Distinct society edit Proposed changes to the Canadian Constitution included adding the phrase distinct society to the Constitution Act 1867 to recognize the uniqueness of Quebec as compared with the rest of Canada 68 69 Controversy editDefining Canadian values is problematic if the goal is to identify values that are universally held According to Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reporter Neil Macdonald there are precious few notions that can accurately be described as universally held Canadian values 70 According to journalist Lysiane Gagnon Canadians don t share common values She notes that while many ideas such as medicare bilingualism and multiculturalism are sometimes characterized as Canadian values many Canadians are against all or some of these 71 Canadian sociologist Vic Satzewich has argued that coming up with a universal set of our nation s values would be impossible 72 The Institute for Canadian Values sponsored advertisements against the teaching of certain sexual education topics in the Ontario school curriculum and discriminated against transsexual transgender and intersex persons The advertisements were controversial and quickly discontinued 73 Barbaric cultural practices issue edit Certain cultural practices were called Barbaric and made illegal in 2015 when the Zero Tolerance for Barbaric Cultural Practices Act was enacted by the Canadian federal government 74 75 76 The Act criminalizes certain conduct related to early and forced marriage ceremonies as well as removing a child from Canada for the purpose of such marriages 77 In the 2015 general election Conservatives had pitched their policy as an issue of Canadian values The Conservatives expanded the issue announcing a proposed RCMP hotline that would allow Canadians to report the existence of barbaric cultural practices in the country These targeted practices included polygamy forced marriage and early marriage i e child marriage 78 Nationalism and its potential adverse impact on foreign policy edit See also Canadian nationalism Scholars have asked whether shared values underpin national identity 79 Denis Stairs links the concept of Canadian values with nationalism Stairs the McCulloch Professor in Political Science at Dalhousie University has argued that there is indeed an intense widespread belief in the existence of Canadian values but says that belief can itself be harmful He contends that Canadians typically think of themselves not as others are but as morally superior They believe in particular that they subscribe to a distinctive set of values Canadian values and that those values are special in the sense of being unusually virtuous A prominent effect of that belief is that it has put them in serious danger of misunderstanding the true origins of their behaviour on the one hand and of doing significant damage to the effectiveness of their diplomacy both next door and overseas on the other 80 Stairs also argues that first billing is usually given in received lists of Canadian values to multiculturalism as a means of challenging the premises of nationalism in Quebec 81 Screening immigrants for anti Canadian values edit Canadian politicians have proposed rejecting immigrants who have anti Canadian values such as intolerance toward other religions cultures genders and sexual orientations reluctance to embrace Canadian freedoms 82 Kellie Leitch a candidate for leadership candidate for the Conservative Party of Canada s 2017 Convention was a vocal proponent of such government screening 82 In 2016 an Environics public opinion poll found that 54 per cent of Canadians agree that there are too many immigrants coming into this country who are not adopting Canadian values 83 84 See also edit nbsp Canada portalAnti Canadian sentiment Canadian identity Center for Research Action on Race Relations English Canadians Etiquette in North America French Canadians Just society Civic nationalism Western cultureReferences edit Sniderman Paul M Fletcher Joseph F Tetlock Philip E 1996 The Clash of Rights Liberty Equality and Legitimacy in Pluralist Democracy Yale University Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 300 06981 5 a b Douglas Baer Edward Grabb and William Johnston National character regional culture and the values of Canadians and Americans Canadian Review of Sociology Revue canadienne de sociologie 30 1 1993 13 36 Neil Macdonald September 13 2016 A very short list of Canadian values Neil Macdonald Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 31 December 2016 Provincial and Territorial Ranking www conferenceboard ca Hollifield James Martin Philip L Orrenius Pia 2014 Controlling Immigration A Global Perspective Third Edition Stanford University Press p 103 ISBN 978 0 8047 8735 2 Bricker Darrell Wright John Ipsos Reid Firm 2005 What Canadians think about almost everything Doubleday Canada pp 8 20 ISBN 978 0 385 65985 7 Examples of Charter related cases Canada s System of Justice Department of Justice Government of Canada 2018 The Environics Institute 2010 Focus Canada Final Report PDF Queen s University p 4 PDF page 8 Archived from the original PDF on February 4 2016 Retrieved December 12 2015 Exploring Canadian values PDF Nanos Research October 2016 Archived from the original PDF on April 5 2017 Retrieved February 1 2017 Baer Grabb and Johnston National character regional culture and the values of Canadians and Americans 1993 p 13 S M Lipset Agrarian Socialism The Cooperative Commonwealth Federation in Saskatchewan a Study in Political Sociology 1950 revised edition 1968 p xv Doug Baer et al The values of Canadians and Americans A critical analysis and reassessment Social Forces 68 3 1990 693 713 Lipset Defining Moments and Recurring Myths A Reply Canadian Review of Sociology amp Anthropology 2001 38 1 pp 97 100 Seymour M Lipset The Canadian Identity International Journal of Canadian Studies 2006 Issue 33 pp 83 98 S M Lipset Revolution and Counterrevolution Change and persistence in social structures 2nd ed 1970 p 55 J M S Careless Canada A story of challenge Cambridge UP 1963 pp 111 13 A R M Lower From Colony to Nation 1946 p 114 Jean Chretien 18 June 2010 My Years as Prime Minister Knopf Canada p 45 ISBN 978 0 307 36872 0 Economic Outlook No 77 stats oecd org Statistics Canada 2005 Quoted in Guy Lawson Trudeau s Canada Again With support from President Obama and the legacy of his father on his side Justin Trudeau sets out to redefine what it means to be Canadian New York Times Dec 8 2015 MALCOLM Raced based politics natural outcome of Trudeau s postnational state Philip Cross Do Canadian values support innovation Lipset Continental Divide 1990 PP 88 89 Dennis R Hoover and Samuel H Reimer Things That Make for a Peaceable Kingdom An Overview of Christianity and Cooperativeness across the Continental Divide Journal of Ecumenical Studies 41 2 2004 205 Canada Government of Canada Statistics October 2015 Canadian Identity 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Reflecting Canadian values Canadian Index of Well Being 2012 06 27 Retrieved 31 December 2016 Diane Symbaluk Tami Bereska Sociology in Action Canadian Edition 2nd ed Nelson Education pp 87 88 ISBN 978 0 17 672841 0 Nicholas Kohler Canadians Feel like They re on Top of the World Macleans ca retrieved October 13 2017 Philip Cross Do Canadian values support innovation D Michael Jackson 2013 The Crown and Canadian Federalism Dundurn pp 18 19 ISBN 9781459709898 Shibao Guo Lloyd Wong 2015 Revisiting Multiculturalism in Canada Theories Policies and Debates SensePublishers p 63 ISBN 9789463002080 Jason Gregory Zorbas 2011 Diefenbaker and Latin America The Pursuit of Canadian Autonomy Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 115 ISBN 9781443832816 Robert A Spencer 1958 Canadian Foreign Policy Conservative Style Canadian Institute of International Affairs p 14 Edward Ansah Akuffo 2016 Canadian Foreign Policy in Africa Regional Approaches to Peace Security and Development Taylor amp Francis p 41 ISBN 9781317169987 Gecelovsky Paul 2020 From humane to responsible Stephen Harper narrative and Canadian foreign policy Canadian Foreign Policy Journal 26 3 239 256 doi 10 1080 11926422 2019 1684962 S2CID 211379781 Canada marks the Confederation countdown as it celebrates 147th birthday July 2014 Ian McKay 2005 Rebels Reds Radicals Rethinking Canada s Left History Between The Lines p 181 ISBN 9781896357973 Seymour Martin Lipset Revolution and Counterrevolution 2nd ed 1970 pp 40 44 Craig Crawford and James Curtis English Canadian American differences in value orientations Survey comparisons bearing on Lipset s thesis Studies in Comparative International Development 14 3 4 1979 23 44 Richard A Wanner Educational inequality Trends in twentieth century Canada and the United States Comparative Social Research 9 1 1986 986 Lawrence William Downey The task of public education The perceptions of people Midwest Administration Center University of Chicago 1960 Quoted in Lipset Revolution and Counterrevolution p 42 Lipset Revolution and Counterrevolution p 41 Ivor F Goodson and Ian R Dowbiggin Vocational education and school reform the case of the London Canada Technical School 1900 1930 History of Education Review 1991 20 1 39 60 Theresa Shanahan et al 2016 The Handbook of Canadian Higher Education MQUP pp 49 52 ISBN 9781553395058 Gerald Kernerman Philip Resnick 2005 Insiders and Outsiders Alan Cairns and the Reshaping of Canadian Citizenship UBC Press p 171 ISBN 9780774810692 Pierre Elliott Trudeau 1993 Memoirs McClelland amp Stewart p 323 ISBN 0771085885 Saunders Philip April 2002 The Charter at 20 CBC News Online CBC Radio Canada Archived from the original on March 7 2006 Retrieved March 17 2006 Trudeau P E 1993 Memoirs McClelland amp Stewart p 323 ISBN 978 0 7710 8588 8 James Hollifield Philip L Martin Pia Orrenius 2014 Controlling Immigration A Global Perspective Third Edition Stanford University Press p 103 ISBN 978 0 8047 8735 2 Chan Kwok bun 2012 International Handbook of Chinese Families Springer p 59 ISBN 9781461402664 Griffith Andrew 2015 Multiculturalism In Canada Evidence and Anecdote Lulu com p 50 ISBN 978 0 9880640 9 6 Mandell Nancy ed 2000 Families of Native Peoples Immigrants and People of Colour Canadian Families Diversity Conflict and Change Toronto Harcourt Brace Canada ISBN 978 0 7747 3629 9 Bakan Abigail B Stasiulis Daiva K 1995 Making the Match Domestic Placement Agencies and the Racialization of Women s Household Work Signs 20 2 303 335 doi 10 1086 494976 ISSN 0097 9740 JSTOR 3174951 S2CID 143829248 Rawlyk G A 1962 Canada s Immigration Policy 1945 1962 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help White paper on immigration Canada Manpower and Immigration Ottawa Queen s Printer 1966 Bickerton James Gagnon Alain 2009 01 01 The Politics of Race and Identity Multiculturalism as a Contested Arena Canadian Politics University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 0121 5 R v Humaid 2015 O N S C 5345 CanLII para 24 retrieved on 2019 12 14 The Health of Canadians The Federal Role 17 1 Universality Parliament of Canada Retrieved 5 January 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link Ronald F Inglehart et al 1996 The North American Trajectory Cultural Economic and Political Ties Between the United States Canada and Mexico Transaction Publishers p 146 ISBN 9781412829816 Memorial to the Victims of Communism Retrieved 15 January 2017 Minister Joly Launches Public Consultations on the Memorial to the Victims of Communism Canada A Land of Refuge Government of Canada 2016 08 31 Archived from the original on 2016 02 03 Retrieved 15 January 2017 Don Butler Victims of communism memorial to be moved Joly announces 00 Ottawa Citizen December 17 2015 Richard Y Bourhis ed Conflict and Language Planning in Quebec 1984 Projet de loi 60 Charte affirmant les valeurs de laicite et de neutralite religieuse de l Etat ainsi que d egalite entre les femmes et les hommes et encadrant les demandes d accommodement 1ere Session 40eme Legislature Quebec 2013 Charles Tessier and Eric Montigny Untangling myths and facts Who supported the Quebec Charter of Values French Politics 14 2 2016 272 285 Trygve Ugland The Quebec Charter of Values A Solution in Search of Problems Journal of Eastern Townships Studies 42 2014 11 online Huguette Young 2016 Justin Trudeau The Natural Heir Dundurn p 129 ISBN 9781459735736 Michael Burgess Ethnicity nationalism and identity in Canada Quebec relations The case of Quebec s distinct society Journal of Commonwealth amp Comparative Politics 34 2 1996 46 64 Richard Johnston and Andre Blais Meech Lake and Mass Politics The Distinct Society Clause Canadian Public Policy Analyse de Politiques 1988 S25 S42 online A very short list of Canadian values Neil Macdonald Gagnon Lysiane Citizenship Rules for Homebodies The Globe and Mail Dec 19 1998 Kellie Leitch misses the point about immigration Heather Shipley Queering Institutions Sexual Identity in Public Education in a Canadian Context Feminist Teacher 23 3 2013 196 210 Barbaric Cultural Practices Act Retrieved 31 December 2016 Ashley Csanady June 17 2015 Barbaric Cultural Practices bill to criminalize forced marriage tackle honour killings passes final vote National Post Retrieved 31 December 2016 Zero Tolerance for Barbaric Cultural Practices Act Government of Canada Retrieved 1 January 2017 Archived Zero Tolerance for Barbaric Cultural Practices Act receives Royal Assent Canada News Centre News gc ca 2016 08 31 Archived from the original on 2015 06 23 Retrieved 2017 01 01 Jon H Pammett Christopher Dornan 2016 The Canadian Federal Election of 2015 Dundurn p 220 ISBN 9781459733367 Alisa Henderson and Nicola McEwen Do shared values underpin national identity Examining the role of values in national identity in Canada and the United Kingdom National Identities 7 2 2005 173 191 Denis Stairs Myths Morals and Reality in Canadian Foreign Policy International Journal 58 2 2003 pp 239 256 in JSTOR Stairs Myths morals and reality in Canadian foreign policy p 247 a b Bruce Campion Smith September 10 2016 Canadians favour screening would be immigrants for anti Canadian values poll shows Toronto Star Retrieved 31 December 2016 Jedwab Politicians should show some honesty on Canadian values pitch Ottawa Citizen December 11 2016 Retrieved 31 December 2016 Angus Reid October 4 2016 Canadians aren t as accepting as we think and we can t ignore it writes Angus Reid Canadian Broadcasting Corporation p English Retrieved 31 December 2016 Further reading editAlston Jon P Theresa M Morris and Arnold Vedlitz Comparing Canadian and American values New evidence from national surveys American Review of Canadian Studies 26 3 1996 301 314 Baer Doug et al The values of Canadians and Americans A critical analysis and reassessment Social Forces 68 3 1990 693 713 Baer Douglas Edward Grabb and William Johnston National character regional culture and the values of Canadians and Americans Canadian Review of Sociology Revue canadienne de sociologie 30 1 1993 13 36 Baer Douglas et al Respect for authority in Canada the United States Great Britain and Australia Sociological Focus 28 2 1995 177 195 Basil Debra Z Charitable donations as a reflection of national values An exploratory comparison of Canada and the United States Journal of Nonprofit amp Public Sector Marketing 18 1 2007 1 19 Hoover Dennis R and Samuel H Reimer Things That Make for a Peaceable Kingdom An Overview of Christianity and Cooperativeness across the Continental Divide Journal of Ecumenical Studies 41 2 2004 205 online Archived 2017 01 07 at the Wayback Machine Hoover Dennis R et al Evangelical Protestantism Meets the Continental Divide Moral and Economic Conservatism in the United States and Canada Political Research Quarterly 55 3 June 2002 351 374 Lipset S M Continental divide The values and institutions of the United States and Canada 1991 Ivan Katchanovski Neil Nevitte and Stanley Rothman Race Gender and Affirmative Action Attitudes in American and Canadian Universities The Canadian Journal of Higher Education 45 4 2015 18 Moon C David Nicholas P Lovrich Jr and John C Pierce Political culture in Canada and the United States comparing social trust self esteem and political liberalism in major Canadian and American Cities Social science quarterly 2000 826 836 in jSTORExternal links editCanadian Index of Well Being University of Waterloo Exploring Canadian values Nanos Research Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canadian values amp oldid 1186103779, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.