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Immigration to Canada

According to the 2021 Canadian census, immigrants in Canada number 8.3 million persons and make up approximately 23 percent of Canada's total population.[1] This represents the eighth-largest immigrant population in the world, while the proportion represents one of the highest ratios for industrialized Western countries.[2]

Following Canada's confederation in 1867, immigration played an integral role in helping develop vast tracts of land.[3] During this era, the Canadian Government would sponsor information campaigns and recruiters to encourage settlement in rural areas; however, this would primarily be only towards those of European and religious Christian backgrounds, while others—particularly Hindus, Buddhist, Shinto, Sikh, Muslim, and Jewish immigrants—as well as the poor, ill, and disabled, would be less than welcome.[3][4] Following 1947, in the post-World War II period, Canadian domestic immigration law and policy went through significant changes, most notably with the Immigration Act, 1976, and the current Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA) from 2002.[4]

The main drivers of population growth are immigration,[5] driven mainly by economic policy and also family reunification.[6][7] A record number of 405,000 immigrants were admitted to Canada in 2021,[8] with plans to increase the annual intake of immigrants to 500,000 per year.[9] New immigrants settle mostly in major urban areas in the country, such as Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver.[10] Canada also accepts large numbers of refugees, accounting for over 10 percent of annual global refugee resettlements; it resettled more than 28,000 in 2018.[11][12]

Statistics and sources of immigration Edit

Canada receives its immigrant population from almost 200 countries. Statistics Canada projects that immigrants will represent between 29.1% and 34.0% of Canada's population in 2041, compared with 23.0% in 2021,[1] while the Canadian population with at least one foreign born parent (first and second generation persons) could rise to between 49.8% and 54.3%, up from 44.0% in 2021.[13][14][15] The number of visible minorities will double and make up the majority of the population of cities in Canada.[16]

Economic impact of immigration Edit

Economic impact of Immigration on Canada is a divisive topic.[citation needed] Two main narratives exist on this matter,[citation needed] one is based on an educated prediction that higher immigration rates increases the size of the economy (GDP) for government spending,[17] and the other is based on studies that it decreases living standards (GDP per capita) for the resident population.[18][19] According to a 2011 report by The Fraser Institute, immigrants to Canada cost the federal government up to $23 billion annually and was found to be a large fiscal burden on Canadian taxpayers.[20] Many sources consider the reason for Canada's mass immigration is because of “dependency ratio,” in Canada this ratio in total is rising hence the government wants mass immigration to increase the taxpayer base for Canada to be a total welfare state.[21][22] Many consider this as a low-wage-low-productivity model of immigration that does not focus on creating wealth, and as a failed approach due to not having systems and settings in place for smoothly transitioning new immigrants into jobs in skill shortage sectors that they were invited to fill, and that can empower them for being highly productive and contributing citizens, and top rate tax payers.[23][24] Among other factors, a major systemic impediment to this transition is the prevalent socioeconomic racialization of immigrants and its life-course altering impact on their quality of life.[25][26] A popular narrative that exists for immigration is that mass immigration can provide a solution to an aging population. This narrative has been questioned by some and they state immigration alone "can do little" in addressing the issue.[27] Many critics consider Canada has to systematically re-focus on legislating and promoting pro-family policies, and have to work actively in raising the living standard of Canadians.[23][28] In 2023, Statistics Canada released a report indicating that the longstanding concern regarding labor shortages has ceased to be a predicament, a major objective of the immigration policy. The report recommends to incorporate workers at all levels for employment by deflating hiring requirements, prioritizing on-the-job training, and establishing sustainable workplace practices.[29] Critics of mass immigration state that Canada does not have the infrastructure and public services to accommodate immigrants and temporary residents in large numbers.[28][30][31] Added to this they observe Canada's moral responsibility (Duty of care) to the welcomed refugees is as bad as its responsibility to the bulging homelessness issue.[32]

History of immigration Edit

 
A collection of four maps showing the distribution of the Canadian population for 1851 (Newfoundland 1857), 1871 (Newfoundland 1869), 1901 and 1921 by historical region.
 
Come to Stay, printed in 1880 in the Canadian Illustrated News, which refers to immigration to the "Dominion".

Following initial British and French colonization, what is now Canada has seen four major waves (or peaks) of immigration and settlement of non-Aboriginal Peoples take place over a span of nearly two centuries. Canada is currently undergoing its fifth wave.

Periods of low immigration in Canada have also occurred: international movement was very difficult during the world wars, and there was a lack of jobs "pulling" workers to Canada during the Great Depression in Canada. Statistics Canada has tabulated the effect of immigration on population growth in Canada from 1851 to 2001.[33]

First wave, pre-1815 Edit

The first significant wave of non-Aboriginal immigration to Canada occurred over almost two centuries with slow, but progressive, French settlement in Quebec and Acadia, along with smaller numbers of American and European entrepreneurs in addition to British military personnel. This wave culminated with the influx of 46–50,000 British Loyalists fleeing the American Revolution, chiefly from the Mid-Atlantic States, mostly into what are now Southern Ontario, the Eastern Townships of Quebec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia.[34] 36,000 of these migrants went to the Maritimes, and some would later make their way to Ontario.

Another wave of 30,000 Americans settled in Ontario and the Eastern Townships between the late 1780s and 1812 with promises of land. From forcibly having cleared land in Scotland, several thousands of Gaelic-speaking Scottish Highlanders migrated to Cape Breton, Nova Scotia and parts of Eastern Ontario during this period, marking a new age for Canada and its people.

Second wave (The Great Migration), 1815–50 Edit

The second wave of immigrants, known as the Great Migration of Canada, saw the arrival of at least 800,000 people between 1815 and 1850, 60% of whom were British (English and Scottish), while the remainder was mostly Irish.[35]

The Great Migration encouraged immigrants to settle in Canada after the War of 1812, including British army regulars who had served in that war. In 1815, 80% of the 250,000 English-speaking people in Canada were either American colonists or their descendants. By 1851, the percentage of Americans had dropped to 30%. Worried about another American attempt at invasion—and to counter the French-speaking influence of Quebec—colonial governors of Canada rushed to promote settlement in backcountry areas along newly constructed plank roads within organized land tracts, mostly in Upper Canada (present-day Ontario). Much of the settlements were organized by large companies to promote clearing, and thus farming of land lots.

With this wave, Irish immigration to Canada had increased in small numbers to organize land settlements and, mostly, to work on canals, timber, railroads. Irish immigration would peak from 1846 to 1849 due to the Great Famine of Ireland, which resulted in hundreds of thousands more Irish migrants arriving on Canada's shores, with a portion migrating to the United States, either in the short-term or over the subsequent decades.

This movement of people boosted Canada's population from approximately 500,000 in 1812 to 2.5 million by 1851. The Francophones would make up roughly 300,000 of the population in 1812, increasing to approx. 700,000 by the 1851 census, however, demographically Canada had swung to a majority Anglophone country. Canada's 1851 population by region would look as follows:

Canada-US Edit

 
The government promoted cheap wheat lands in the Prairies. 1898

The Dominion Lands Act of 1872 copied the American system by offering ownership of 160 acres (65 ha) of land free (with a small registration fee) to any man over the age of 18, or any woman heading a household. They did not need to be citizens but had to live on the plot and improve it.

Also during this period, Canada became a port of entry for many Europeans seeking to gain entry into the United States. Canadian transportation companies advertised Canadian ports as a hassle-free way to enter the US, especially as the States began barring entry to certain ethnicities. Both the US and Canada mitigated this situation in 1894 with the Canadian Agreement which allowed for U.S. immigration officials to inspect ships landing at Canadian ports for immigrants excluded from the US. If found, the transporting companies were responsible for shipping the persons back.[36]

Annual immigration to Canada 1890-1920[37]

Clifford Sifton, Ottawa's Minister of the Interior (1896–1905), argued that the free western lands were ideal for growing wheat and would attract large numbers of hard-working farmers. He removed obstacles that included control of the lands by companies or organizations that did little to encourage settlement. Land companies, the Hudson's Bay Company, and school lands all accounted for large tracts of excellent property. The railways kept closed even larger tracts because they were reluctant to take legal title to the even-numbered lands they were due, thus blocking the sale of odd-numbered tracts. With the goal of maximizing immigration from Britain, eastern Canada and the US, Sifton broke the legal log jam, and set up aggressive advertising campaigns in the U.S. and Europe, with a host of agents promoting the Canadian West. He would also broker deals with ethnic groups who wanted large tracts for homogeneous settlement.[38]

Third wave, 1890–1920 Edit

 
Punjabi Sikh settlers at a lumber camp in British Columbia, circa 1914

Canada's third wave of immigration came mostly from continental Europe, and peaked before World War I from 1911 to 1913, with over 400,000 migrants in 1912—many of whom were from Eastern and Southern Europe.

Chinese immigration Edit

Prior to 1885, restrictions on immigration were imposed mostly in response to large waves of migrants rather than planned policy decisions. Such restrictions, at least as official policy, would not explicitly target any specific group or ethnicity of people until 1885, with the passing of the first Chinese Head Tax legislation by the MacDonald government in response to a growing number of Chinese migrants working on the Canadian Pacific Railway.[39]

Subsequent increases in the head tax in 1900 and 1903 limited Chinese entrants to Canada, and it was followed by 1907 major riots against 'Oriental' people (i.e. Asians) in Vancouver, BC by Asiatic Exclusion League.[40] In 1923, the government passed the Chinese Immigration Act which excluded Chinese people from entering Canada altogether between 1923 and 1947.[41] In recognizing Canada's historical discrimination against Chinese immigrants, an official government apology and compensations were announced on 22 June 2006.[42]

Fourth wave, 1940s–60s Edit

Annual immigration to Canada 1940-1969[37]

The fourth wave came from Europe following World War II, and peaked at 282,000 in 1957. With many of these migrants coming from Italy and Portugal, Pier 21 in Halifax, Nova Scotia proved to be an influential port for European immigration. From 1928 until ceasing operations in 1971, the Pier would receive 471,940 Italians, becoming the third-largest ethnic group to immigrate to Canada during that time period.[43]

Immigrants from Britain, however, were still given the highest priority,[44] and 'Canadianization' would become of great importance for new arrivals who lacked a British cultural background.[45] There would be no such effort to attract Francophone immigrants. In regard to economic opportunity, Canada was most attractive to farmers headed to the Prairies, who typically came from Eastern and Central Europe, as immigrants from Britain preferred urban life.[46] As such, the Church of England took up the role of introducing British values to farmers newly arrived in the Prairie provinces, although, in practice, they clung to their traditional religious affiliations.[47] Nonetheless, around the 1960s, Indo-Canadians would establish themselves in Canada's exurban and rural agriculture and become a dominant feature in British Columbia's farming sector, having already primarily been established in the provincial forestry industry since the turn of the 20th century.[48] Hispanic immigrants would follow similar lines, particularly in regions that were linked with strong farming settlements immediately south of the border.[4]

With the economy still expanding, Canadians did not always demonstrate sufficient mobility to fill the hiring needs of some regions, nor to fill some economic niches (particularly “entry-level jobs”). Due to these circumstances, in 1967, the Canadian Government would introduce a points-based system, under which applicants were given preference if they knew either French, English, or both; were non-dependent adults (i.e., not too old to work); already had prospective employment lined up in Canada; had relatives in the country (who could support them if necessary); were interested in settling in the parts of Canada with the greatest need for workers; and were trained or educated in fields that were in demand. The new legislation would prove to be an integral element in attracting large numbers of immigrants from sources that were considered “non-traditional.”[4]

From then on, Canada would start to become a more multi-ethnic country with substantial non-British or non-French European elements. Ukrainian Canadians, for instance, accounted for the largest Ukrainian population outside of the Soviet Union. Also in the 1960s, young American men fled to Canada in order to avoid the U.S. draft for the Vietnam War. Especially large numbers were established in BC's Kootenays, Gulf Islands, and Sunshine Coast, followed by others, including counterculture, back-to-the-land advocates who were more drawn to Canada.

Contemporary immigration, 1970s–present Edit

 
Fifth-wave Canadian children celebrating Canada Day in Vancouver, 1 July 1999

Immigration in Canada since the 1970s, or the fifth wave, has been mostly from Asia. This was largely influenced in 1976 when the Immigration Act was revised and was maintained as official government policy. The regulations introduced in 1976 consisted of 9 categories: education, occupation, professional skills, age, arranged employment, knowledge of English and/or French, relatives in Canada and “personal characteristics.” To qualify for immigration 50 points out of 100 were necessary in 1976.[49]

On 20 February 1978, Canada and Quebec sign an immigration agreement allowing Quebec decision-making power in independently choosing its immigrants, who would then still have to be approved by Ottawa.[50]

During the Mulroney administration, immigration levels were increased. From the late 1980s, the 'fifth wave' of immigration has since maintained, with slight fluctuations (225,000–275,000 annually). Today,[needs update] political parties remain cautious in criticizing high levels of immigration, because in the early 1990s, as noted by The Globe and Mail, Canada's Reform Party "was branded 'racist' for suggesting that immigration levels be lowered from 250,000 to 150,000".[51][52] However, the Coalition Avenir Québec who were elected in the 2018 Quebec election advocated for a reduction to the number of immigrants, to 40,000 for the province of Quebec, a reduction of 20%.[53]

In 2008, Stephen Harper gave then-parliamentary secretary and Minister of Multiculturalism and Citizenship Jason Kenney, established a mandate to integrate immigrants, while improving relationship between the government to communities to gain votes.[54] In November 2017, Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen announced that Canada would admit nearly 1 million permanent residents over the following three years, rising from 0.7% to 1% of its population by 2020.[55] This increase was motivated by the economic needs of the country caused by an aging population.[55]

In 2008, Citizenship and Immigration Canada (now Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) ) made changes to immigration policy, such as reducing professional categories for skilled immigration and eliminating caps for immigrants in various categories.[56] Likewise, in 2015, Canada introduced the 'Express Entry' system, providing a streamlined application process for many economic immigrants.[57]

 
Sikhs celebrating the Sikh new year in Toronto

From 2013–2014, most of the Canadian public, as well as the country's major political parties, supported either sustaining or increasing the current level of immigration.[58][59] A sociological study conducted in 2014 concluded that "Australia and Canada are the most receptive to immigration among western nations."[60] In 2017, an Angus Reid poll indicated that a majority of respondents believed that Canada should accept fewer immigrants and refugees.[61]

According to 2016 Census data via Statistics Canada, over one in five Canadians were born abroad, while 22.3% of the Canadian population belonged to visible minorities, of whom three in ten were born in Canada.[62] Moreover, 21.9% of the Canadian population reported themselves as being or having been a landed immigrant or permanent resident in Canada—close to the 1921 Census record of 22.3%, the highest level Canada has seen since Confederation in 1867.[62]

In 2019, Canada admitted 341,180 permanent residents, compared to 321,055 the previous year.[63] Among those admitted, 58% were economic immigrants and their accompanying immediate families; 27% were family class; 15% were either resettled refugees or protected persons or were in the humanitarian and other category.[63] India, Philippines and China are the top three countries of origin for immigrants moving to Canada.[64] A record number of 405,000 immigrants were admitted to Canada in 2021,[65] surpassing the previous annual record of 400,900 set in 1913.

In 2022, the Government of Canada stated plans to increase immigration to 500,000 people per year until 2025.[66]

Immigration rate Edit

Since confederation in 1867, the highest annual immigration rate in Canada occurred during the early 20th century, including 1913 (new immigrants accounted for 5.3 percent of the total population), 1912 (5.1 percent), 1911 (4.6 percent), 1907 (4.3 percent) and 1910 (4.1 percent).[37][67] At this time, immigration from the British Isles increased, supplemented by a rapid increase in immigration flows from continental Europe, especially Germany, Scandinavia, and the Soviet Union.

Per the Canada–Quebec Accord of 1991, Quebec has sole responsibility for selecting most immigrants destined to the province. However, once immigrants are granted permanent residency or citizenship they are free to move between and reside in any provinces under Section 6 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

In 2001, 250,640 people immigrated to Canada, relative to a total population of 30,007,094 people per the 2001 Census. Since 2001, immigration has ranged between 221,352 and 262,236 immigrants per annum.[68] In 2017, the Liberal government announced Canada will welcome nearly one million immigrants over the next three years. The number of migrants would climb to 310,000 in 2018, up from 300,000 in 2017. That number was projected to rise to 330,000 in 2019, then 340,000 in 2020.[69][70][71] Accordingly, between 2017 and 2018, net immigration accounted for 80% of Canada's population increase.[72]

The three main official reasons given for the level of immigration were:

 
  • The social component – Canada facilitates family reunification.
  • The humanitarian component – Relating to refugees.
  • The economic component – Attracting immigrants who will contribute economically and fill labour market needs.

Canada's level of immigration peaked in 1993 in the last year of the Progressive Conservative government and was maintained by the Liberal Party of Canada. Ambitious targets of an annual 1% per capita immigration rate were hampered by financial constraints. The Liberals committed to raising actual immigration levels further in 2005.

As Canadian political parties have been cautious about criticizing high levels of immigration, immigration levels to Canada (approx. 0.7% per year) are considerably higher per capita than to the United States (approx. 0.3% per year).

Furthermore, much of the immigration to the US is from Latin America and relatively less from Asia, though admitting about twice as many immigrants from Asian countries (e.g. China, India, the Philippines, and Pakistan) as Canada. As such, the Hispanic/Latin American population makes up the largest minority group in the United States, whereas such is true for the Asian population in Canada.

 
Immigrant settlement patterns and public transit in Toronto, 2016

Immigrant population growth is concentrated in or around large cities (particularly Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal). These cities have experienced increased service demands that accompany strong population growth, causing concern about the capability of the infrastructure to handle influxes in such places. For example, as noted in a Toronto Star article from 14 July 2006, 43% of Canada's immigrants move to the Greater Toronto Area and that, "unless Canada cuts immigrant numbers, our major cities will not be able to maintain their social and physical infrastructures."[73] Most of the provinces that do not have one of those destination cities have implemented strategies to try to boost their share of immigration. Within cities, immigrants are more likely to settle in areas with better public transit service compared to non-immigrants, and are more likely to use public transit for travelling to work, partly because of costs and barriers to car ownership[74] While cities are a popular destination for new immigrants, some small towns have seen an influx of immigration due to economic reasons and local schools districts are working to adjust to the change.[75]

Canada's plan to increase immigration aims to address labor shortages and demographic changes that threaten the country's future. While experts acknowledge the benefits of increased immigration, they emphasize the need for comprehensive solutions that extend beyond simply raising immigration levels. Matching newcomers' skills with available job opportunities, streamlining recognition of foreign credentials through regulatory bodies, and expanding the focus to encompass a wider range of job sectors are crucial steps. Additionally, they express concerns regarding the strain on essential services and potential stakeholder influence on policy-making require careful consideration. The experts concur that achieving a balance between the country's economic needs and the well-being of both newcomers and existing residents will be key to effectively addressing labor market challenges and ensuring successful immigration integration.[76][77]

Illegal migration Edit

 
A Royal Canadian Mounted Police in the Quebec-New York border in Lacolle directs a man entering Canada outside of a port of entry to a nearby tent for processing.

Estimates of undocumented immigrants in Canada range between 35,000 and 120,000.[78] James Bissett, a former head of the Canadian Immigration Service, has suggested that the lack of any credible refugee screening process, combined with a high likelihood of ignoring any deportation orders, has resulted in tens of thousands of outstanding warrants for the arrest of rejected refugee claimants, with little attempt at enforcement.[79] A 2008 report by the Auditor General Sheila Fraser stated that Canada has lost track of as many as 41,000 illegal immigrants.[80][81]

In August 2017, the border between Quebec and New York, most notably the former Roxham Road port of entry, saw an influx of up to 500 crossings each day outside of official ports of entry by people seeking asylum in Canada.[82] Entering Canada outside of a port of entry is not an offence under either the Criminal Code or Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, and regulations under the IRPA only require that a person seeking to enter Canada outside a point of entry to "appear without delay" at the nearest port of entry.[83] While entering Canada outside of a port of entry may represent an unlawful act, section 133 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act requires that charges related to any offences associated with entering Canada are stayed while an entrant's claim is being processed in accordance with the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees.[84]

As result, Canada increased border patrol and immigration staffing in the area, reiterating that crossing the border outside ports of entry (referred to as 'irregular migration') had no effect on one's asylum status.[85][86] It is reported that over 38,000 'irregular migrants' arrived in Canada since early 2017.

For the same reason, both Ontario and Quebec requested the Government of Canada to provide CA$200 million or more to cover their cost of burden to house and provide services to asylum seekers. Related to asylum seekers, Canada joined 164 countries in signing the UN Global Compact for Migration in 2018. The 2017 government claims it is for following careful measures and to meet international obligations in accommodating irregular migrants.[87]

While it is impossible to determine, it is generally accepted that there are tens of thousands of illegal immigrants living in Canada. There were 2,560 removal orders issued against illegal immigrants in 2018, according to a report by the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada.[88] An internal audit report surfaced in 2023 from the Canada Border Security Agency (CBSA) revealing that nearly half of the flagged foreign nationals with serious offences including war crimes, espionage and terrorism were allowed to gain residency in Canada from 2014 to 2019. Immigration officials granted residency for 46% of over 7,000 cases where the CBSA recommended against entry. The audit evaluated the Immigration National Security Screening Program, which is responsible for preventing inadmissible individuals from entering or staying in the country.[89][90]

Settlement workers Edit

Settlement workers help immigrants into Canada understand their rights and responsibilities and find the programs and services they need to integrate with the new culture and the prospects of a livelihood. They motivate organizations to hire immigrants and support immigration through recruiting new members/ employees. They work with government agencies, school boards, libraries and other community organizations with networks of resources.[91] These working relationships also help to provide families with the tools necessary to manage the changing identities of new immigrant families to Canada.[75] Non-profit organizations such as Mennonite New Life Centre of Toronto[92] were founded as early as 1983 to help with immigrant settlement.[93]

Dual intent migration: International students Edit

Canada is an education haven for international students desirous to gain a North American education. According to Project Atlas, Canada is the world's fourth most popular destination for foreign students. The government by opening its gates to international students across the country has given an economic boom to the education sector. In 2019 alone, it is estimated that a revenue of $21 billion was gained from tuition alone.[94][95] In a given year it is estimated that around 600,000 international students reside in the country as temporary residents.[96]

In 2019 it was reported that there is a new trend in exploiting Canadian visa process, where immigrant consultants/lawyers with food franchises, motels, gas stations, and family run businesses collect substantial cash from students and foreign nationals for supporting them with LMIA and in their permanent resident applications.[97][98]

Also in 2019, many international student advocacy protested for receiving permanent residence status at the time of their arrival in Canada and commented that "migrant students should have the same rights, and that means full labour rights, the same fees, and permanent resident status from day one and that's just fair for the money they spend in Canada."[99] One of their objectives are to equalize their tuition fees to the subsidized fees of domestic students. In 2020, international student bodies across Canada once more pleaded for the same rights being faced with the COVID-19 pandemic.[100]

Attitudes towards immigration Edit

The vast majority of the Canadian public as well as the major political parties support immigration.[58]

2016 Edit

In October 2016, the Angus Reid Institute partnered with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) to conduct a study of 'Canadian values.'[101] Survey results would indicate that about 68% of those polled said that they wanted minorities to do more to fit into the mainstream. However, the same number also said that they were nonetheless happy with how immigrants have integrated themselves into the community. Moreover, 79% of Canadians believe immigration policy should be based on the country's economic and labour needs, rather than on the needs of foreigners to escape crises in their home countries.

Canada's finance minister Bill Morneau established the Advisory Council on Economic Growth, which called for a gradual increase in permanent immigration to Canada to 450,000 people a year.[102][103]

In an analysis of the survey, Angus Reid, himself, wrote that Canadians' commitment to multiculturalism is not increasing and that Canadian attitudes have been affected by the wake of North American and European nationalist movements, due to which certain provinces have even begun to develop colourist preferences. Reid also expressed his discomfort in the effect that an increase in illiterate refugees may have on Canadian society. Nonetheless, he found that the majority of newcomers and refugees feel that they are treated fairly and welcomed as a "Canadian."[104]

2017–2018 Edit

According to a 2017 poll, 32% of Canadians—up from 30% in 2016—believed that too many refugees were coming to Canada. The poll also asked respondents about their comfortability with surface-level diversity (e.g. around people of a different race), to which 89% said they were comfortable—a number that dropped from 94% in 2005–06.[105]

In 2018, an Angus Reid poll found that two-thirds (67%) of Canadians agreed that the situation of illegal immigration to Canada constitutes a "crisis" and that Canada's "ability to handle the situation is at a limit." Among respondents who voted in the 2015 election, 56% of those who voted Liberal and 55% of those who voted NDP agreed that the matter had reached a crisis level—agreed upon with 87% of respondents who voted Conservative in the 2015 election. Six out of ten respondents also told the pollster that Canada is "too generous" towards would-be refugees, a spike of five percentage points since the question was asked the previous year.[106][107]

2019 Edit

EKOS Research Associates, in a 2019 poll, found that about 40% of Canadians feel that there are too many non-white immigrants coming to the country.[108] EKOS expressed this number as demonstrating an increase from those who opposed immigration in previous years, and as an evidence for resurgence of colonial depictions that can lead to racialization of new non-white immigrants.[109][110]

In a 2019 poll by Léger Marketing, 63% of respondents wanted limits to be set on immigration, while 37% said immigration should be expanded. The results would show a split along party lines, as Green and Conservative Party supporters favoured a reduction, while Liberal and NDP supporters favoured the opposite. Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, Ahmed Hussen felt that the poll results may be indicative of the concerns of some Canadians about housing shortages and the ability of communities to absorb more people.[111]

2020 Edit

In a 2020 poll conducted by Nanos Research Group, 17 percent of respondents said an increase to the number of immigrants accepted into the country (compared to 2019) was acceptable, 36 percent said there should be no change, and 40 percent wanted a reduction.[112] Rima Wilkes, a University of British Columbia professor raised a question about why consultation with First Nations is not made for shaping immigration policies while in almost every aspect there is one when it comes to sharing of unceded land and water resources.[113] Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) data in 2020 shows that there were 12,122 deportations and out of them 1,657 were administrative removals.[114]

History of citizenship and emigration Edit

Citizenship Edit

The word 'Canadian' as a term of nationality or citizenship was first used under the Immigration Act, 1910, to designate those British subjects who were domiciled in Canada, whereas all other British subjects required permission to land. A separate status of "Canadian national" was created under the Canadian Nationals Act, 1921, which would broaden the definition of 'Canadian' to include such citizen's wife and children (fathered by the citizen) who had not yet landed in Canada. After the passage of the Statute of Westminster in 1931, the monarchy ceased to be an exclusively British institution. Thus, Canadians—as well as all others living among what is known today as the Commonwealth realms—were regarded as subjects of the Crown. However, in legal documents, the term 'British subject' continued to be used, hence 'Canadians' were still, officially, British subjects born or regularly domiciled in Canada.[citation needed]

In 1946, Canada would be the first nation in the then-British Commonwealth to establish its own nationality law, with the enactment of the Canadian Citizenship Act, 1946, taking effect on 1 January 1947. In order to be deemed a Canadian citizen, one generally had to be a British subject on the date that the Act took effect, or had been admitted to Canada as landed immigrants before that date. First Nations people were later included by amendment in 1956. The phrase 'British subject' referred generally to anyone from the United Kingdom, its colonies at the time, or a Commonwealth country. Acquisition and loss of British-subject status before 1947 was determined by British law.[citation needed]

Many of the provisions to acquire or lose Canadian citizenship that existed under the 1946 legislation were repealed, whereby Canadian citizens generally would no longer be subject to involuntary loss of citizenship, barring revocation on the grounds of immigration fraud. On 15 February 1977, Canada removed restrictions on dual citizenship.

Present Edit

Canada offers Canadian citizenship through naturalization. In 2006, the Canadian government reduced the landing fee per immigrant by 50%.[115] In June 2017, the implementation of the first of a series of important reforms to the Citizenship Act took effect. These reforms restored many of the previous requirements that were in place for over 3 decades in Canada before they were removed and replaced with more stringent criteria by the former Conservative government in 2015. The most important of these changes include:[116][117]

  • The requirement of permanent residence for 3 out of 5 years during the period immediately prior to filing the application.
  • Removal of a physical presence rule.
  • Persons aged 14 to 54 years must pass a Canadian knowledge test and demonstrate a basic ability in either of English or French, Canada's official languages.
  • Revocation of citizenship must follow a more formal and balanced process.

Emigration Edit

While emigration from Canada to the United States has historically exceeded immigration, there have been short periods in which the reverse was true, such as:

Canada would also see mass emigration during periods of political turmoil or war, such as the Vietnam War. There are over 1 million Americans living in Canada, and over 1 million Canadians living in the US, with many millions more who are descendants of Canadian immigrants to the US—New England alone is 20–25% of Canadian descent.

Immigration has always been offset by emigration: at times this was of great concerns of governments intent on filling up the country, particularly the western provinces. The United States was overall the primary destination followed by reverse migration. As a result, the population of Canada at Confederation (1867) was 3.75 million, or 10% of the US population, an average that maintained from about 1830 to 1870. This number would drop to 6% by 1900 due to large emigration to the US, despite large-scale immigration to Canada. Emigration to the US was only 370,000 in the 1870s; averaged a million a decade from 1880 to 1910; almost 750,000 from 1911 to 1920 and 1.25 million from 1921 to 1930. They consisted of both native-born Canadians and recent immigrants from various, mostly European nations. Between 1945 and 1965, emigration to the US averaged 40–45,000 annually. It was not until 1960 that the population of Canada reached the 10% mark again, or 18 million.

As of 2017, with over 35 million people, Canada has 10.8% of the population of its southern neighbour. In times of economic difficulty, Canadian governments frequently resorted to deportation and coerced "voluntary" deportation to thin out ranks of unemployed workers. However, by the time of the administration of Mackenzie King, it was realized that this was an improvident short-term solution that would result in future labour shortages (that immigration was initially intended to overcome).[118]

Immigration categories Edit

In current Canadian law, immigrants are distinguished by four categories:[119][72]

  1. Family: persons closely related to one or more Canadian residents who live in Canada.[i]
  2. Economic: skilled workers, caregivers, or business persons.
  3. Protected person or Refugee: persons who are escaping persecution, torture, and/or cruel and unusual punishment.[ii]
  4. Humanitarian or other: persons accepted as immigrants for humanitarian or compassionate reasons.

In March 2019, the Canadian Government announced its Francophone Immigration Strategy as an initiative to increase immigration outside of Quebec for French-speaking individuals in all admission categories.[72]

In 2010, Canada accepted 280,681 immigrants (permanent and temporary) of which 186,913 (67%) were Economic immigrants; 60,220 (22%) were Family class; 24,696 (9%) were Refugees; and 8,845 (2%) were others through working holidays, internships, and studies.[120][121] In 2019, with 341,180 admissions, Canada achieved its highest level of permanent resident admissions in recent history.[72]

Economic immigrants Edit

The Economic Immigration Class is the largest source of permanent resident admissions in Canada.[72] In 2019, 196,658 individuals were admitted to Canada under the Economic Class, making up approximately 58% of all admissions that year, and a 5.5% increase from 2018. This represents a record-high number of admissions under this category.[72]

Year 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Number of economic immigrants permitted[72] 170,390 156,028 159,289 186,366 196,658

IRCC uses several sub-categories of economic immigrants, including skilled workers, under the following classes:[119]

The basic immigration programs that offer permanent admission to Canada to those who are skilled include:

The immigration programs that offer permanent admission to onshore, temporary residents (or who once were) include:

  • Canadian experience class: the process is applicable to only those who have a Canadian Experience, they are eligible to apply to any immigration programs through submitting an online profile to the Express Entry pool. The highest ranked candidates are then invited to apply for permanent residence[123]
  • Provincial Nominee Program/class (PNP)
  • Rural and Northern Immigration Program (RNIP)
  • Regional Immigration Pilot Program (RIPP)
  • Municipal Nominee Immigration Program (MNIP)
  • Atlantic Immigration Pilot Program (AIPP)
  • Yukon Community Pilot

The refugee immigration programs that offer permanent admission to Canada include:

  • Economic Mobility Pathways Pilot (EMPP): for displaced persons

The business immigration programs that offer permanent admission to Canada include:

Federal Start-Up Visa program Edit

This program grants Canadian permanent residence to qualified entrepreneurs wishing to establish their start-up business in Canada. Successful candidates must get the support of one or more of the designated organizations: Venture capital funds, Angel investor groups, Business incubators.[124]

Applicants must also supply proof of sufficient settlement funds to apply for the program.[125] Individuals with a certain net worth can also apply for permanent residence via certain programs.[126] For business owners and investor immigrants who do not fit into the Start-Up business class or Quebec Provincial programs, there is a Federal Owner Operator LMIA pathway that if executed correctly can lead to permanent admission to Canada.[127]

The high-profile Skilled worker principal applicants group comprised 19.8% of all immigration in 2005. Canada has also created a VIP Business Immigration Program which allows immigrants with sufficient business experience or management experience to receive the Permanent Residency in a shorter period than other types of immigration.

As of May 1, 2014, the Federal Skilled Worker Class opened once again accepting 25,000 applicants with intake caps at 1,000 per category. A New Economic Action Plan 2015 took effect in January 2015 in which the skilled worker program will be more of an employer based program. The current list of accepted occupations for 2014 includes many occupations such as senior managers, accountants, physicians and medical professionals, professionals in marketing and advertising, real estate professionals and many more.[128]

A candidate's eligibility for Federal Skilled Worker category is assessed based on six selection factor points and scored on a scale of 100. The current pass mark is 67 points.[129][130] Six Selection Factor Points:

  • Language skills points
  • Education points
  • Work experience points
  • Age points
  • Arranged employment in Canada points
  • Adaptability points

The changes in 2015 moved permanent residency in Canada away from the "first come, first served" model, and towards a new structure that took on permanent residents based on Canada's economic need. The system is called "Express Entry".[131] Alberta's Immigrant Nominee Program (AINP),[132] in particular, allows skilled workers, along with their families, to make application for permanent residency, and several large Alberta employers with operations in rural areas actively recruit employees from abroad and support them and their families in seeking permanent residency.[75]

Canada announced a new immigration quota of 1.2 million for 2021-2023, with targets of 401,000 new permanent residents in year 2021, 411,000 in 2022 and 421,000 in 2023.[133]

In an effort to meet the 2021 target, on April 14, 2021 Canada created a new immigration pathway to permanent residency for essential workers and international graduates already in Canada. Temporary workers with at least one year of Canadian work experience in a health-care profession or another pre-approved essential occupation, and international students who graduated from a Canadian institution in 2017 or later are eligible. The maximum numbers of immigrants under this program are 20,000 temporary workers in health care, 30,000 temporary workers in other selected essential occupations, and 40,000 international students.[134][135]

Family class Edit

Both citizens and permanent residents may sponsor family members to immigrate to Canada as permanent residents, under the requirement that the sponsor is able to accept financial responsibility for the individual for a given period of time.[72]

In 2019, 91,311 individuals were admitted under the Family Reunification category, which is a 7.2% increase from 2018 and a record high. Also that year, 80% of parent and grandparent applications were processed within 19 months, an improvement from 72 months in 2017.[72]

Year 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Projected
2021 2022 2023
Spouse, partners and children 49,997 60,955 61,973 67,140 69,298
Parent and grandparent 15,489 17,043 20,495 18,030 22,011
Total family reunification[72] 65,485 77,998 82,468 85,170 91,311 76,000–105,000 74,000–105,000 74,000–106,000

Humanitarian and compassionate immigration Edit

Canada also grants permanent residency based on humanitarian and compassionate grounds on a case-by-case basis, or certain public policy considerations under exceptional circumstances. In 2019, there were 4,681 permanent residents admitted through these streams.[72]

Year 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
People admitted under humanitarian and compassionate grounds[72] 4,315 3,792 3,631 4,026 4,681

Refugees and protected persons Edit

Each year, IRCC facilitates the admission of a targeted number of permanent residents under the refugee resettlement category. Under Canadian nationality law, an immigrant can apply for citizenship after living in Canada for 1095 days (3 years) in any five-year period provided that they lived in Canada as a permanent resident for at least two of those years.[136] Opposition parties have advocated for providing one-year free residency permits for refugees as an opportunity to increase their living standards until they are ready to migrate back to their home countries, rather than uprooting them from their heritage and culture in forms of relief.[137][138]

The CBSA is responsible for administering persons who enter Canada through its designated ports of entry (POE); the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) are responsible for those who enter Canada unlawfully, i.e., enter between designated POEs.[139]

A person who is seeking asylum in Canada must be first considered eligible by the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (IRB).[140] The IRB classifies eligible refugees into two separate categories:[140]

  • Convention Refugees: Someone who is outside and unable to return to their home country due to a fear of persecution based on several factors including race, religion, and political opinion. (This is outlined by the United Nations' multilateral treaty, Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees.)
  • Protected Persons: Claims for asylum under this category are usually made at a point of entry into Canada. Those claiming to be a person in need of protection must be unable to return to their home country safely because they would be subjected to a danger of torture, risk for their life, or risk of cruel and unusual treatment.
Refugee statistics, by sponsorship[72]
Year 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Blended Sponsorship Refugee 811 4,435 1,285 1,149 993
Government-Assisted Refugee 9,488 23,628 8,638 8,093 9,951
Privately Sponsored Refugee 9,747 18,642 16,699 18,568 19,143
Total 20,046 46,705 26,622 27,810 30,087

Claiming asylum in Canada Edit

 
Tents set up on the Canadian side of border between Quebec and New York in 2017 to process asylum applicants entering Canada irregularly.

Individuals can make an asylum claim in Canada at a port of entry, at a CBSA inland office or an IRCC inland office. CBSA or IRCC officials will then determine if an individual is eligible to make an asylum claim.[139]

After entry, an interview for eligibility is conducted to deem whether the asylum seeker is allowed or declined admission into Canada. Those who are admitted submit their reasons for admissibility, in writing. The IRB hears their case after 60 days; in favorable terms, the claimants are accepted as refugees.[141] If the claims are not deemed appropriate by the interviewer, the asylum seeker may be deported.

According to the Canadian government, anyone can make a claim for refugee protection once they are physically present in Canada, regardless of how they arrived in the country. This includes those who have entered Canada without proper documentation or who have overstayed their visas. Asylum seekers can make a claim at a port of entry, such as an airport or border crossing, or at an inland office of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC).[142] It is important to note that claiming asylum in Canada can be a complex and lengthy process, and there are many factors that can affect an individual's chances of success. For example, the availability of evidence to support the individual's claim, the individual's ability to communicate effectively in English or French, and the political climate in their home country can all have an impact on the outcome of the asylum claim.[143]

There are many instances in which claims have been deemed ineligible for referral to the IRB, notably those by migrants who seek entry into Canada through the United States, where the Safe Third Country Agreement (STCA) is applied.[140] The STCA dictates persons seeking asylum must make their claim in the first country in which they arrive—either the US or Canada—unless they qualify for an exception. Therefore, if an asylum seeker were to enter the US (as a non-U.S. citizen), make their way to the Canada–U.S. land border, and then attempt to enter Canada with a claim for asylum, they would be denied entry under the STCA. The Agreement is responsible for limiting refugee eligibility to enter Canada and the rejection of several hundred claims a year since its implementation.[144] The CBSA reported that 6,000–14,000 claims were made before the implementation of the STCA, and dropped to an average of 4,000 claims per year after its implementation.[145]

Asylum claimants have been subjected to "indirect refoulment", a consequence of a person's claim in Canada being refused under the STCA, subjecting them to deportation to the destination in which the person was originally seeking asylum from, due to more conservative immigration and refugee policies in the U.S.[146]

Protected persons Edit

The IRCC provides support for protected persons and their dependants, whereby protected persons are defined as asylum claimants who are granted protected status by Canada. In 2019, 18,443 individuals obtained permanent residence under the protected persons in Canada and dependents abroad category.[72]

Year 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
People admitted as protected persons and dependents[72] 12,068 12,209 14,499 17,683 18,443

Refugees in detention Edit

As part of the passing of Bill C-31 in December 2012, asylum seekers arriving at a point of entry on the Canada–United States border have been subject to incarceration and detention.[147] Claimants are subject to detention for failing to provide sufficient identification documents, which is in violation with the United Nations Refugee Convention, to which Canada is a signatory.[147] In 2010–2011, Canada detained 8,838 people, of which 4,151 of them were asylum seekers or rejected refugee claimants.[148] There is a requirement to the maximum time limit spent in detention upon being released, a situation which has been subject to criticism held in contrast to areas in Europe: Ireland (30 days), France (32 days), Spain (40 days), and Italy (60 days).[148]

Refugees programs Edit

The IRCC funds several programs that provide supports and services to resettled refugees.[139]

The Private Sponsorship of Refugees Program is an initiative whereby refugees may resettle in Canada with support and funding from private or joint government-private sponsorship.[149] Established under Operation Lifeline in 1978,[150] the program has since resettled and provided support for over 200,000 refugees[151] under various initiatives and with fluctuating annual intakes.[152]

Pre-departure services backed by IRCC include Canadian Orientation Abroad training and coverage for certain medical services received prior to arriving in Canada. All resettled refugees in Canada receive temporary health care coverage; the IRCC, along with civil-society and sponsorship organizations, also provide:[139]

  • income support
  • immediate and essential supports and services upon arrival (e.g., housing)
    • assistance in securing housing
  • settlement services, including language training
  • Other refugee-support programs

Asylum statistics Edit

Individuals can make an asylum claim in Canada at a port of entry, at a CBSA inland office or an IRCC inland office. CBSA or IRCC officials will then determine if an individual is eligible to make an asylum claim.[139]

Asylum claimants processed by the IRCC and CBSA, Jan–Nov 2020[139]
Province / Territory CBSA ports of entry CBSA inland office CBSA total IRCC total CBSA and IRCC total
Alberta 85 [a] 85 760 845
British Columbia 225 140 365 1,705 2,070
Manitoba 30 30 135 165
New Brunswick 5 0 5 30 35
Newfoundland and Labrador 0 5 5
Nunavut 0 0 0 0 0
Northwest Territories 0 0 0 0 0
Nova Scotia 55 55
Ontario 2,070 95 2165 7,875 10,040
Prince Edward Island 0 0 0 10 10
Quebec 4,730 80 4810 4,575 9,385
Saskatchewan 5 5 30 35
Yukon 0 0 0 0
Total 7,150 315 7,465 15,180 22,645
  1. ^ All values between 0 and 5 are shown as “—” in order to prevent individuals from being identified when data is compiled and compared to other publicly available statistics. All other values are rounded to the closest multiple of 5 for the same reason; as a result of rounding, data may not sum to the totals indicated.
RCMP interceptions, Jan–Nov 2020[139]
Province / Territory Total
Alberta 0
British Columbia 76
Manitoba 26
New Brunswick 0
Newfoundland and Labrador 1
Nunavut 0
Northwest Territories 0
Nova Scotia 0
Ontario 0
Prince Edward Island 0
Quebec 3,163
Saskatchewan 0
Yukon 0
Total 3,266

Francophone Immigration Strategy Edit

In March 2019, the Canadian Government announced its Francophone Immigration Strategy purposed to achieve a target of 4.4% of French-speaking immigrants of all admissions, outside of Quebec, by 2023.[72]

The strategy's Welcoming Francophone Communities Initiative provides $12.6 million to 14 selected communities (2020 to 2023) for projects to support and welcome French-speaking newcomers. In 2019, IRCC's Settlement Program launched new official-language training services for French-speaking newcomers who settle in Francophone communities outside of Quebec. Seven organizations were selected to receive up to $7.6 million over 4 years.[72]

French-speaking permanent residents admitted outside Quebec in 2019[72]
Immigration categories Total Percentage
Economic class 5,523 65%
Family-sponsored 1,420 17%
Resettled refugees and protected persons[iii] 1,445 17%
Other immigrants 81 1%
Total 8,469 100%

Accommodations and Inclusivity Edit

Disabilities Edit

In 2011 and 2012, several families were denied immigration to Canada because members of their family have an autism spectrum diagnosis and Citizenship and Immigration Canada (now IRCC) felt the potential cost of care for those family members would place an excessive demand on health or social services.[153][154] People with autism disorders can be accepted if they are able to depend on themselves.[154] According to the Canadian Human Rights Act, discrimination based on disability is prohibited in all areas of society, including housing. Therefore, it is essential for the accommodation industry in Canada to provide accessible accommodations for disabled people. There are various types of accommodations available in Canada for disabled people, including hotels, motels, bed and breakfasts, resorts, and other types of lodging.[155] The housing and support services for individuals with disabilities are the focus of several non-profit organizations in Canada. The Canadian Association for Community Living (CACL) is one such group that promotes the rights of those with disabilities and offers housing and other services to both individuals and families. Several housing initiatives, including group homes and supportive housing, are run by the CACL around the nation.[156]

Job market and education Edit

The federal government was asked by businesses to expand programs for professional immigrants to get Canadian qualifications in their fields. In response, the Multiculturalism Act of 1988 was passed, and Canadian Council on Learning was created by the federal government to promote best practices in workplace learning. Additionally, the credentials of immigrant workers are assessed through Canadian agencies by the IRCC for immigration.[157] Ideally, this credential equalization assessment reduces the gap between education and suitable jobs. However, strains of discrimination, i.e. statistical discrimination lead to a systemic process of rejecting and discouraging immigrants (racialization), which is an antithesis for an anti-oppressive culture.[158][159][160][161] In 2023, discrimination against immigrants in Canada based on their origin and color was reported to be at a high 22 percent.[162] In 2022, a significant portion (43 - 47%) of late Generation Y and Generation Z, the working population in Canada, finds that their country and societal systems have a racial bias.[163] A 2021 study reveals that 71 percent of the Canadian workforce experienced workplace harassment and violence, and workplace prevention policies for penalizing harassers were mostly just paper tigers and remained only on paper.[164]

Across Canada, businesses have proposed to allow unpaid or basic-pay internships as part of a rewards system, which were considered illegal (both in government and private) in many provinces at the time, which posed a major obstacle to integrate immigrants into the job market. The lack of collective ethnic bargaining and active citizenship from minority immigrants, and the lack of policy leadership in this sector from the government has resulted in a "catch-22” situation in which employers want job experience, but potential employees cannot get Canadian experience without first working in Canadian jobs/internships. The Ontario Human Rights Commission has acknowledged the racist effects of Canadian work experience requirement for jobs, and has declared it to be "prima facie discrimination," and an inadmissible criterion for exclusion of applicants. However, this and the employment equity act has not translated into a nationwide inclusive policy.[165]

An article points out that simply increasing immigration levels without considering the underlying issues in the labor market may not effectively address skills shortages or unemployment rates. Experts emphasize the importance of aligning immigration policies with targeted skills training programs to ensure that incoming immigrants possess the skills needed in the labor market. Furthermore, they stress the significance of investing in education and upskilling programs for both newcomers and the existing workforce to bridge the skills gap.[77] The 1966 White Paper on Immigration advocated for the selection of skilled immigrants, as an influx of unskilled immigrants during a strong economy could exacerbate poverty issues during economic downturns. In 1994, the Chretien Liberals prioritized immigrants with skills and abilities conducive to higher incomes and economic growth, reducing reliance on social welfare. However, despite the White Paper on Immigration's anti-discriminatory stance, achieving full economic and social inclusion for immigrants remained elusive. They often encounter explicit and implicit oppression due to the absence of policies aimed at preventing and penalizing it. This policy of inaction echoes historical Canadian policies that marginalized Chinese immigrants following the completion of the railway in 1885.[166][167] Many observe Canada faces the same "soft trade barriers" that it has been facing for more than half a century with regards to helping immigrants transition into careers they were trained for or to better careers even with Canada's modern educational capacity and political opportunity that can fix them.[24]

Quebec Edit

In 2017, the Province of Quebec stated that they will prohibit offering or receiving public services for individuals who cover their face, such as those who wear chadors, niqabs or burqas. The reasoning behind the bill was to ensure protection of Quebecois, but the discriminatory strain of the political ideology was reported to be aimed at articles of certain religious faiths. The bill would come under question of in regards to Canadian policy on religious tolerance and accommodation.[168][169][170] A qualitative study found that taste-based discrimination is more prevalent in cities than semi-urban areas, as major factors that contribute to less hostility seem to be regional differences in industrial composition and attendant labour demand.[171][172] There have been demands for the province to charge additional fees from immigrants before landing in Quebec. Quebecois have also urged the province to impose French language training in order for newcomers to become better integrated with the language and culture of their communities. As a result the government initiated a subsidized linguistic integration program in 2019.[173]

Recently, the province saw a 20% gap in earnings between immigrants and Canadian-born individuals in Quebec, largely due to the discrepancy between their respective literacy rates.[citation needed] In 2008, the Canadian Council on Learning reported that almost half of Canadian adults fall below the internationally-accepted literacy standard for coping in a modern society.[174]

In late 2019, under Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ) government they introduced a Quebec values test where immigrants would have to pass.[175][176][177][178][179]

During the 2022 Quebec general election, the Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ) government of François Legault which increased it majority ran on getting more immigration powers from Canada to the Province of Quebec.[180][181] Legault has raised the idea of even having referendum on immigration powers.[182][183][184]

After their election win they repeated their pledge for Quebec getting more immigration powers.[185][186]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The "family" category can be subdivided into (a) spouse, partner, and children; (b) parents and grandparents; and (c) other (includes "orphaned – brother, sister, nephew, niece and grandchild, and other relatives"). (Hussen 2017).
  2. ^ The "Protected Persons and Refugees" category can be subdivided into: (a) Protected Persons in Canada and Dependants Abroad; (b) Government-Assisted Refugees (GARs); (c) Blended Visa Office-Referred Refugees; and (d) Privately Sponsored Refugees. (Hussen 2017).
  3. ^ Resettled refugees and protected persons in-Canada and dependants abroad

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Further reading Edit

History Edit

  • Adelman, Howard; Borowski, Allan; Burstein, Meyer; and Foster, Lois, eds. Immigration and Refugee Policy: Australia and Canada Compared (1996)
  • Avery, Donald H. Reluctant Host: Canada's Response to Immigrant Workers, 1896–1994 (1996)
  • Carment, David; Bercuson, David Jay (2008), The World in Canada: Diaspora, Demography, and Domestic Politics, McGill-Queen's Univ. Press, ISBN 9780773532960
  • Dirks, Gerald E (May 1, 1977), Canada's Refugee Policy: Indifference or Opportunism?, McGill-Queen's University Press, ISBN 978-0-7735-0296-3
  • Hall, D.J. (1977), Howard Palmer (ed.), "Clifford Sifton: Immigration and Settlement Policy, 1896–1905", The Settlement of the West, pp. 60–85
  • Hawkins, Freda (1990), Critical Years in Immigration: Canada and Australia Compared, McGill-Queen's Press, ISBN 9780773508521
  • Kelley, Ninette; Trebilcock, Michael J. (2010), The Making of the Mosaic: A History of Canadian Immigration Policy (2nd ed.), University of Toronto Press, ISBN 978-0-8020-9536-7
  • Knowles, Valerie (2008), Strangers at Our Gates: Canadian Immigration and Immigration Policy, 1540–2006 a standard scholarly history
  • Lacroix, Patrick (2016). "From Strangers to 'Humanity First': Canadian Social Democracy and Immigration Policy, 1932–1961". Canadian Journal of History. 51 (1): 58–82. doi:10.3138/cjh.ach.51.1.003. S2CID 147861807.
  • McLean, Lorna "'To Become Part of Us': Ethnicity, Race, Literacy and the Canadian Immigration Act of 1919", Canadian Ethnic Studies, 36#2 (2004): pp. 1–28.
  • Magocsi, Paul R (1999), Encyclopedia of Canada's peoples
  • Peykovska, Penka (2022), The First Generations of Bulgarians in Canada= - In: Migration and Social Development, Vol. 2, pp. 15-64, BAS IHS, ISBN 978-954-2903-54-3
  • Powell, John (2005), Encyclopedia of North American Immigration, Facts On File, ISBN 978-0-8160-4658-4
  • Timlin, Mabel F (November 1960). "Canada's Immigration Policy, 1896-1910". Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science. 26 (4): 517–532. doi:10.2307/138931. JSTOR 138931.
  • Walker, Barrington (2008), The History of Immigration and Racism in Canada: Essential Readings, Canadian Scholars' Press, ISBN 978-1-55130-340-6

Guides Edit

  • Adu-Febiri, Francis (2009), Succeeding from the margins of Canadian society: a strategic resource for new immigrants, refugees and international students, CCB Pub, ISBN 978-1-926585-27-7
  • Kranc, Benjamin A; Constantin, Elena (2004), Getting into Canada: How to Make a Successful Application for Permanent Residence, How To Books, ISBN 978-1-85703-929-0
  • DeRocco, John F. Chabot (2008), From Sea to Sea to Sea: A Newcomer's Guide to Canada, Full Blast Productions, ISBN 978-0-9784738-4-6
  • Driedger, Leo; Halli, Shivalingappa S. (1999), Immigrant Canada: Demographic, Economic, and Social Shallenges, University of Toronto Press, ISBN 978-0-8020-4276-7
  • Moens, Alexander; Collacott, Martin (2008), Immigration Policy and the Terrorist Threat in Canada and the United States, Fraser Institute, ISBN 978-0-88975-235-1
  • Noorani, Nick; Noorani, Sabrina (2008), Arrival Survival Canada: A Handbook for New Immigrants, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-542891-9

Other Edit

  • Can Canada Handle a Polite, Rational and Fact-Based debate on immigration?, Herbert Grubel
  • David Suzuki's statements on immigration to Canada
  • Marsden, Lorna. "Population Issues in the Immigration Debate." Canadian Ethnic Studies= Etudes Ethniques au Canada 7.1 (1975): 22.

External links Edit

  • History of Canadian immigration at Marianopolis College
  • Library and Archives Canada
  • Going to Canada – Immigration Portal: A source of free and useful information for newcomers and prospective immigrants to Canada.

immigration, canada, according, 2021, canadian, census, immigrants, canada, number, million, persons, make, approximately, percent, canada, total, population, this, represents, eighth, largest, immigrant, population, world, while, proportion, represents, highe. According to the 2021 Canadian census immigrants in Canada number 8 3 million persons and make up approximately 23 percent of Canada s total population 1 This represents the eighth largest immigrant population in the world while the proportion represents one of the highest ratios for industrialized Western countries 2 Following Canada s confederation in 1867 immigration played an integral role in helping develop vast tracts of land 3 During this era the Canadian Government would sponsor information campaigns and recruiters to encourage settlement in rural areas however this would primarily be only towards those of European and religious Christian backgrounds while others particularly Hindus Buddhist Shinto Sikh Muslim and Jewish immigrants as well as the poor ill and disabled would be less than welcome 3 4 Following 1947 in the post World War II period Canadian domestic immigration law and policy went through significant changes most notably with the Immigration Act 1976 and the current Immigration and Refugee Protection Act IRPA from 2002 4 The main drivers of population growth are immigration 5 driven mainly by economic policy and also family reunification 6 7 A record number of 405 000 immigrants were admitted to Canada in 2021 8 with plans to increase the annual intake of immigrants to 500 000 per year 9 New immigrants settle mostly in major urban areas in the country such as Toronto Montreal and Vancouver 10 Canada also accepts large numbers of refugees accounting for over 10 percent of annual global refugee resettlements it resettled more than 28 000 in 2018 11 12 Contents 1 Statistics and sources of immigration 2 Economic impact of immigration 3 History of immigration 3 1 First wave pre 1815 3 2 Second wave The Great Migration 1815 50 3 2 1 Canada US 3 3 Third wave 1890 1920 3 3 1 Chinese immigration 3 4 Fourth wave 1940s 60s 4 Contemporary immigration 1970s present 4 1 Immigration rate 4 2 Illegal migration 4 3 Settlement workers 4 4 Dual intent migration International students 4 5 Attitudes towards immigration 4 5 1 2016 4 5 2 2017 2018 4 5 3 2019 4 5 4 2020 5 History of citizenship and emigration 5 1 Citizenship 5 1 1 Present 5 2 Emigration 6 Immigration categories 6 1 Economic immigrants 6 1 1 Federal Start Up Visa program 6 2 Family class 6 3 Humanitarian and compassionate immigration 6 4 Refugees and protected persons 6 4 1 Claiming asylum in Canada 6 4 2 Protected persons 6 4 3 Refugees in detention 6 4 4 Refugees programs 6 4 5 Asylum statistics 6 5 Francophone Immigration Strategy 7 Accommodations and Inclusivity 7 1 Disabilities 7 2 Job market and education 7 2 1 Quebec 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 11 1 History 11 2 Guides 11 3 Other 12 External linksStatistics and sources of immigration EditMain article Canada immigration statistics Canada receives its immigrant population from almost 200 countries Statistics Canada projects that immigrants will represent between 29 1 and 34 0 of Canada s population in 2041 compared with 23 0 in 2021 1 while the Canadian population with at least one foreign born parent first and second generation persons could rise to between 49 8 and 54 3 up from 44 0 in 2021 13 14 15 The number of visible minorities will double and make up the majority of the population of cities in Canada 16 Economic impact of immigration EditMain article Economic impact of immigration to Canada This section possibly contains synthesis of material which does not verifiably mention or relate to the main topic Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Economic impact of Immigration on Canada is a divisive topic citation needed Two main narratives exist on this matter citation needed one is based on an educated prediction that higher immigration rates increases the size of the economy GDP for government spending 17 and the other is based on studies that it decreases living standards GDP per capita for the resident population 18 19 According to a 2011 report by The Fraser Institute immigrants to Canada cost the federal government up to 23 billion annually and was found to be a large fiscal burden on Canadian taxpayers 20 Many sources consider the reason for Canada s mass immigration is because of dependency ratio in Canada this ratio in total is rising hence the government wants mass immigration to increase the taxpayer base for Canada to be a total welfare state 21 22 Many consider this as a low wage low productivity model of immigration that does not focus on creating wealth and as a failed approach due to not having systems and settings in place for smoothly transitioning new immigrants into jobs in skill shortage sectors that they were invited to fill and that can empower them for being highly productive and contributing citizens and top rate tax payers 23 24 Among other factors a major systemic impediment to this transition is the prevalent socioeconomic racialization of immigrants and its life course altering impact on their quality of life 25 26 A popular narrative that exists for immigration is that mass immigration can provide a solution to an aging population This narrative has been questioned by some and they state immigration alone can do little in addressing the issue 27 Many critics consider Canada has to systematically re focus on legislating and promoting pro family policies and have to work actively in raising the living standard of Canadians 23 28 In 2023 Statistics Canada released a report indicating that the longstanding concern regarding labor shortages has ceased to be a predicament a major objective of the immigration policy The report recommends to incorporate workers at all levels for employment by deflating hiring requirements prioritizing on the job training and establishing sustainable workplace practices 29 Critics of mass immigration state that Canada does not have the infrastructure and public services to accommodate immigrants and temporary residents in large numbers 28 30 31 Added to this they observe Canada s moral responsibility Duty of care to the welcomed refugees is as bad as its responsibility to the bulging homelessness issue 32 History of immigration EditMain articles History of immigration to Canada and History of Canadian nationality law See also European immigration to the Americas nbsp A collection of four maps showing the distribution of the Canadian population for 1851 Newfoundland 1857 1871 Newfoundland 1869 1901 and 1921 by historical region nbsp Come to Stay printed in 1880 in the Canadian Illustrated News which refers to immigration to the Dominion Following initial British and French colonization what is now Canada has seen four major waves or peaks of immigration and settlement of non Aboriginal Peoples take place over a span of nearly two centuries Canada is currently undergoing its fifth wave Periods of low immigration in Canada have also occurred international movement was very difficult during the world wars and there was a lack of jobs pulling workers to Canada during the Great Depression in Canada Statistics Canada has tabulated the effect of immigration on population growth in Canada from 1851 to 2001 33 First wave pre 1815 Edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Immigration to Canada news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The first significant wave of non Aboriginal immigration to Canada occurred over almost two centuries with slow but progressive French settlement in Quebec and Acadia along with smaller numbers of American and European entrepreneurs in addition to British military personnel This wave culminated with the influx of 46 50 000 British Loyalists fleeing the American Revolution chiefly from the Mid Atlantic States mostly into what are now Southern Ontario the Eastern Townships of Quebec New Brunswick and Nova Scotia 34 36 000 of these migrants went to the Maritimes and some would later make their way to Ontario Another wave of 30 000 Americans settled in Ontario and the Eastern Townships between the late 1780s and 1812 with promises of land From forcibly having cleared land in Scotland several thousands of Gaelic speaking Scottish Highlanders migrated to Cape Breton Nova Scotia and parts of Eastern Ontario during this period marking a new age for Canada and its people Second wave The Great Migration 1815 50 Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Great Migration of Canada The second wave of immigrants known as the Great Migration of Canada saw the arrival of at least 800 000 people between 1815 and 1850 60 of whom were British English and Scottish while the remainder was mostly Irish 35 The Great Migration encouraged immigrants to settle in Canada after the War of 1812 including British army regulars who had served in that war In 1815 80 of the 250 000 English speaking people in Canada were either American colonists or their descendants By 1851 the percentage of Americans had dropped to 30 Worried about another American attempt at invasion and to counter the French speaking influence of Quebec colonial governors of Canada rushed to promote settlement in backcountry areas along newly constructed plank roads within organized land tracts mostly in Upper Canada present day Ontario Much of the settlements were organized by large companies to promote clearing and thus farming of land lots With this wave Irish immigration to Canada had increased in small numbers to organize land settlements and mostly to work on canals timber railroads Irish immigration would peak from 1846 to 1849 due to the Great Famine of Ireland which resulted in hundreds of thousands more Irish migrants arriving on Canada s shores with a portion migrating to the United States either in the short term or over the subsequent decades This movement of people boosted Canada s population from approximately 500 000 in 1812 to 2 5 million by 1851 The Francophones would make up roughly 300 000 of the population in 1812 increasing to approx 700 000 by the 1851 census however demographically Canada had swung to a majority Anglophone country Canada s 1851 population by region would look as follows Upper Canada Ontario 952 000 Lower Canada Quebec 890 000 about a quarter of whom spoke English as a first language The Maritimes 550 000 Canada US Edit nbsp The government promoted cheap wheat lands in the Prairies 1898The Dominion Lands Act of 1872 copied the American system by offering ownership of 160 acres 65 ha of land free with a small registration fee to any man over the age of 18 or any woman heading a household They did not need to be citizens but had to live on the plot and improve it Also during this period Canada became a port of entry for many Europeans seeking to gain entry into the United States Canadian transportation companies advertised Canadian ports as a hassle free way to enter the US especially as the States began barring entry to certain ethnicities Both the US and Canada mitigated this situation in 1894 with the Canadian Agreement which allowed for U S immigration officials to inspect ships landing at Canadian ports for immigrants excluded from the US If found the transporting companies were responsible for shipping the persons back 36 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Annual immigration to Canada 1890 1920 37 Clifford Sifton Ottawa s Minister of the Interior 1896 1905 argued that the free western lands were ideal for growing wheat and would attract large numbers of hard working farmers He removed obstacles that included control of the lands by companies or organizations that did little to encourage settlement Land companies the Hudson s Bay Company and school lands all accounted for large tracts of excellent property The railways kept closed even larger tracts because they were reluctant to take legal title to the even numbered lands they were due thus blocking the sale of odd numbered tracts With the goal of maximizing immigration from Britain eastern Canada and the US Sifton broke the legal log jam and set up aggressive advertising campaigns in the U S and Europe with a host of agents promoting the Canadian West He would also broker deals with ethnic groups who wanted large tracts for homogeneous settlement 38 Third wave 1890 1920 Edit nbsp Punjabi Sikh settlers at a lumber camp in British Columbia circa 1914Canada s third wave of immigration came mostly from continental Europe and peaked before World War I from 1911 to 1913 with over 400 000 migrants in 1912 many of whom were from Eastern and Southern Europe Chinese immigration Edit Further information History of Chinese immigration to CanadaPrior to 1885 restrictions on immigration were imposed mostly in response to large waves of migrants rather than planned policy decisions Such restrictions at least as official policy would not explicitly target any specific group or ethnicity of people until 1885 with the passing of the first Chinese Head Tax legislation by the MacDonald government in response to a growing number of Chinese migrants working on the Canadian Pacific Railway 39 Subsequent increases in the head tax in 1900 and 1903 limited Chinese entrants to Canada and it was followed by 1907 major riots against Oriental people i e Asians in Vancouver BC by Asiatic Exclusion League 40 In 1923 the government passed the Chinese Immigration Act which excluded Chinese people from entering Canada altogether between 1923 and 1947 41 In recognizing Canada s historical discrimination against Chinese immigrants an official government apology and compensations were announced on 22 June 2006 42 Fourth wave 1940s 60s Edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Annual immigration to Canada 1940 1969 37 The fourth wave came from Europe following World War II and peaked at 282 000 in 1957 With many of these migrants coming from Italy and Portugal Pier 21 in Halifax Nova Scotia proved to be an influential port for European immigration From 1928 until ceasing operations in 1971 the Pier would receive 471 940 Italians becoming the third largest ethnic group to immigrate to Canada during that time period 43 Immigrants from Britain however were still given the highest priority 44 and Canadianization would become of great importance for new arrivals who lacked a British cultural background 45 There would be no such effort to attract Francophone immigrants In regard to economic opportunity Canada was most attractive to farmers headed to the Prairies who typically came from Eastern and Central Europe as immigrants from Britain preferred urban life 46 As such the Church of England took up the role of introducing British values to farmers newly arrived in the Prairie provinces although in practice they clung to their traditional religious affiliations 47 Nonetheless around the 1960s Indo Canadians would establish themselves in Canada s exurban and rural agriculture and become a dominant feature in British Columbia s farming sector having already primarily been established in the provincial forestry industry since the turn of the 20th century 48 Hispanic immigrants would follow similar lines particularly in regions that were linked with strong farming settlements immediately south of the border 4 With the economy still expanding Canadians did not always demonstrate sufficient mobility to fill the hiring needs of some regions nor to fill some economic niches particularly entry level jobs Due to these circumstances in 1967 the Canadian Government would introduce a points based system under which applicants were given preference if they knew either French English or both were non dependent adults i e not too old to work already had prospective employment lined up in Canada had relatives in the country who could support them if necessary were interested in settling in the parts of Canada with the greatest need for workers and were trained or educated in fields that were in demand The new legislation would prove to be an integral element in attracting large numbers of immigrants from sources that were considered non traditional 4 From then on Canada would start to become a more multi ethnic country with substantial non British or non French European elements Ukrainian Canadians for instance accounted for the largest Ukrainian population outside of the Soviet Union Also in the 1960s young American men fled to Canada in order to avoid the U S draft for the Vietnam War Especially large numbers were established in BC s Kootenays Gulf Islands and Sunshine Coast followed by others including counterculture back to the land advocates who were more drawn to Canada Contemporary immigration 1970s present Edit nbsp Fifth wave Canadian children celebrating Canada Day in Vancouver 1 July 1999Immigration in Canada since the 1970s or the fifth wave has been mostly from Asia This was largely influenced in 1976 when the Immigration Act was revised and was maintained as official government policy The regulations introduced in 1976 consisted of 9 categories education occupation professional skills age arranged employment knowledge of English and or French relatives in Canada and personal characteristics To qualify for immigration 50 points out of 100 were necessary in 1976 49 On 20 February 1978 Canada and Quebec sign an immigration agreement allowing Quebec decision making power in independently choosing its immigrants who would then still have to be approved by Ottawa 50 During the Mulroney administration immigration levels were increased From the late 1980s the fifth wave of immigration has since maintained with slight fluctuations 225 000 275 000 annually Today needs update political parties remain cautious in criticizing high levels of immigration because in the early 1990s as noted by The Globe and Mail Canada s Reform Party was branded racist for suggesting that immigration levels be lowered from 250 000 to 150 000 51 52 However the Coalition Avenir Quebec who were elected in the 2018 Quebec election advocated for a reduction to the number of immigrants to 40 000 for the province of Quebec a reduction of 20 53 In 2008 Stephen Harper gave then parliamentary secretary and Minister of Multiculturalism and Citizenship Jason Kenney established a mandate to integrate immigrants while improving relationship between the government to communities to gain votes 54 In November 2017 Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen announced that Canada would admit nearly 1 million permanent residents over the following three years rising from 0 7 to 1 of its population by 2020 55 This increase was motivated by the economic needs of the country caused by an aging population 55 In 2008 Citizenship and Immigration Canada now Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada IRCC made changes to immigration policy such as reducing professional categories for skilled immigration and eliminating caps for immigrants in various categories 56 Likewise in 2015 Canada introduced the Express Entry system providing a streamlined application process for many economic immigrants 57 nbsp Sikhs celebrating the Sikh new year in TorontoFrom 2013 2014 most of the Canadian public as well as the country s major political parties supported either sustaining or increasing the current level of immigration 58 59 A sociological study conducted in 2014 concluded that Australia and Canada are the most receptive to immigration among western nations 60 In 2017 an Angus Reid poll indicated that a majority of respondents believed that Canada should accept fewer immigrants and refugees 61 According to 2016 Census data via Statistics Canada over one in five Canadians were born abroad while 22 3 of the Canadian population belonged to visible minorities of whom three in ten were born in Canada 62 Moreover 21 9 of the Canadian population reported themselves as being or having been a landed immigrant or permanent resident in Canada close to the 1921 Census record of 22 3 the highest level Canada has seen since Confederation in 1867 62 In 2019 Canada admitted 341 180 permanent residents compared to 321 055 the previous year 63 Among those admitted 58 were economic immigrants and their accompanying immediate families 27 were family class 15 were either resettled refugees or protected persons or were in the humanitarian and other category 63 India Philippines and China are the top three countries of origin for immigrants moving to Canada 64 A record number of 405 000 immigrants were admitted to Canada in 2021 65 surpassing the previous annual record of 400 900 set in 1913 In 2022 the Government of Canada stated plans to increase immigration to 500 000 people per year until 2025 66 Immigration rate Edit Main articles Canada immigration statistics Annual immigration and rate and Economic impact of immigration to Canada Since confederation in 1867 the highest annual immigration rate in Canada occurred during the early 20th century including 1913 new immigrants accounted for 5 3 percent of the total population 1912 5 1 percent 1911 4 6 percent 1907 4 3 percent and 1910 4 1 percent 37 67 At this time immigration from the British Isles increased supplemented by a rapid increase in immigration flows from continental Europe especially Germany Scandinavia and the Soviet Union Per the Canada Quebec Accord of 1991 Quebec has sole responsibility for selecting most immigrants destined to the province However once immigrants are granted permanent residency or citizenship they are free to move between and reside in any provinces under Section 6 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms In 2001 250 640 people immigrated to Canada relative to a total population of 30 007 094 people per the 2001 Census Since 2001 immigration has ranged between 221 352 and 262 236 immigrants per annum 68 In 2017 the Liberal government announced Canada will welcome nearly one million immigrants over the next three years The number of migrants would climb to 310 000 in 2018 up from 300 000 in 2017 That number was projected to rise to 330 000 in 2019 then 340 000 in 2020 69 70 71 Accordingly between 2017 and 2018 net immigration accounted for 80 of Canada s population increase 72 The three main official reasons given for the level of immigration were nbsp 100 000 50 000 99 999 20 000 49 999 10 000 19 999The social component Canada facilitates family reunification The humanitarian component Relating to refugees The economic component Attracting immigrants who will contribute economically and fill labour market needs Canada s level of immigration peaked in 1993 in the last year of the Progressive Conservative government and was maintained by the Liberal Party of Canada Ambitious targets of an annual 1 per capita immigration rate were hampered by financial constraints The Liberals committed to raising actual immigration levels further in 2005 As Canadian political parties have been cautious about criticizing high levels of immigration immigration levels to Canada approx 0 7 per year are considerably higher per capita than to the United States approx 0 3 per year Furthermore much of the immigration to the US is from Latin America and relatively less from Asia though admitting about twice as many immigrants from Asian countries e g China India the Philippines and Pakistan as Canada As such the Hispanic Latin American population makes up the largest minority group in the United States whereas such is true for the Asian population in Canada nbsp Immigrant settlement patterns and public transit in Toronto 2016Immigrant population growth is concentrated in or around large cities particularly Vancouver Toronto and Montreal These cities have experienced increased service demands that accompany strong population growth causing concern about the capability of the infrastructure to handle influxes in such places For example as noted in a Toronto Star article from 14 July 2006 43 of Canada s immigrants move to the Greater Toronto Area and that unless Canada cuts immigrant numbers our major cities will not be able to maintain their social and physical infrastructures 73 Most of the provinces that do not have one of those destination cities have implemented strategies to try to boost their share of immigration Within cities immigrants are more likely to settle in areas with better public transit service compared to non immigrants and are more likely to use public transit for travelling to work partly because of costs and barriers to car ownership 74 While cities are a popular destination for new immigrants some small towns have seen an influx of immigration due to economic reasons and local schools districts are working to adjust to the change 75 Canada s plan to increase immigration aims to address labor shortages and demographic changes that threaten the country s future While experts acknowledge the benefits of increased immigration they emphasize the need for comprehensive solutions that extend beyond simply raising immigration levels Matching newcomers skills with available job opportunities streamlining recognition of foreign credentials through regulatory bodies and expanding the focus to encompass a wider range of job sectors are crucial steps Additionally they express concerns regarding the strain on essential services and potential stakeholder influence on policy making require careful consideration The experts concur that achieving a balance between the country s economic needs and the well being of both newcomers and existing residents will be key to effectively addressing labor market challenges and ensuring successful immigration integration 76 77 Illegal migration Edit nbsp A Royal Canadian Mounted Police in the Quebec New York border in Lacolle directs a man entering Canada outside of a port of entry to a nearby tent for processing Estimates of undocumented immigrants in Canada range between 35 000 and 120 000 78 James Bissett a former head of the Canadian Immigration Service has suggested that the lack of any credible refugee screening process combined with a high likelihood of ignoring any deportation orders has resulted in tens of thousands of outstanding warrants for the arrest of rejected refugee claimants with little attempt at enforcement 79 A 2008 report by the Auditor General Sheila Fraser stated that Canada has lost track of as many as 41 000 illegal immigrants 80 81 In August 2017 the border between Quebec and New York most notably the former Roxham Road port of entry saw an influx of up to 500 crossings each day outside of official ports of entry by people seeking asylum in Canada 82 Entering Canada outside of a port of entry is not an offence under either the Criminal Code or Immigration and Refugee Protection Act and regulations under the IRPA only require that a person seeking to enter Canada outside a point of entry to appear without delay at the nearest port of entry 83 While entering Canada outside of a port of entry may represent an unlawful act section 133 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act requires that charges related to any offences associated with entering Canada are stayed while an entrant s claim is being processed in accordance with the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees 84 As result Canada increased border patrol and immigration staffing in the area reiterating that crossing the border outside ports of entry referred to as irregular migration had no effect on one s asylum status 85 86 It is reported that over 38 000 irregular migrants arrived in Canada since early 2017 For the same reason both Ontario and Quebec requested the Government of Canada to provide CA 200 million or more to cover their cost of burden to house and provide services to asylum seekers Related to asylum seekers Canada joined 164 countries in signing the UN Global Compact for Migration in 2018 The 2017 government claims it is for following careful measures and to meet international obligations in accommodating irregular migrants 87 While it is impossible to determine it is generally accepted that there are tens of thousands of illegal immigrants living in Canada There were 2 560 removal orders issued against illegal immigrants in 2018 according to a report by the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada 88 An internal audit report surfaced in 2023 from the Canada Border Security Agency CBSA revealing that nearly half of the flagged foreign nationals with serious offences including war crimes espionage and terrorism were allowed to gain residency in Canada from 2014 to 2019 Immigration officials granted residency for 46 of over 7 000 cases where the CBSA recommended against entry The audit evaluated the Immigration National Security Screening Program which is responsible for preventing inadmissible individuals from entering or staying in the country 89 90 Settlement workers Edit Settlement workers help immigrants into Canada understand their rights and responsibilities and find the programs and services they need to integrate with the new culture and the prospects of a livelihood They motivate organizations to hire immigrants and support immigration through recruiting new members employees They work with government agencies school boards libraries and other community organizations with networks of resources 91 These working relationships also help to provide families with the tools necessary to manage the changing identities of new immigrant families to Canada 75 Non profit organizations such as Mennonite New Life Centre of Toronto 92 were founded as early as 1983 to help with immigrant settlement 93 Dual intent migration International students Edit See also International students in Canada Canada is an education haven for international students desirous to gain a North American education According to Project Atlas Canada is the world s fourth most popular destination for foreign students The government by opening its gates to international students across the country has given an economic boom to the education sector In 2019 alone it is estimated that a revenue of 21 billion was gained from tuition alone 94 95 In a given year it is estimated that around 600 000 international students reside in the country as temporary residents 96 In 2019 it was reported that there is a new trend in exploiting Canadian visa process where immigrant consultants lawyers with food franchises motels gas stations and family run businesses collect substantial cash from students and foreign nationals for supporting them with LMIA and in their permanent resident applications 97 98 Also in 2019 many international student advocacy protested for receiving permanent residence status at the time of their arrival in Canada and commented that migrant students should have the same rights and that means full labour rights the same fees and permanent resident status from day one and that s just fair for the money they spend in Canada 99 One of their objectives are to equalize their tuition fees to the subsidized fees of domestic students In 2020 international student bodies across Canada once more pleaded for the same rights being faced with the COVID 19 pandemic 100 Attitudes towards immigration Edit The vast majority of the Canadian public as well as the major political parties support immigration 58 2016 Edit In October 2016 the Angus Reid Institute partnered with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation CBC to conduct a study of Canadian values 101 Survey results would indicate that about 68 of those polled said that they wanted minorities to do more to fit into the mainstream However the same number also said that they were nonetheless happy with how immigrants have integrated themselves into the community Moreover 79 of Canadians believe immigration policy should be based on the country s economic and labour needs rather than on the needs of foreigners to escape crises in their home countries Canada s finance minister Bill Morneau established the Advisory Council on Economic Growth which called for a gradual increase in permanent immigration to Canada to 450 000 people a year 102 103 In an analysis of the survey Angus Reid himself wrote that Canadians commitment to multiculturalism is not increasing and that Canadian attitudes have been affected by the wake of North American and European nationalist movements due to which certain provinces have even begun to develop colourist preferences Reid also expressed his discomfort in the effect that an increase in illiterate refugees may have on Canadian society Nonetheless he found that the majority of newcomers and refugees feel that they are treated fairly and welcomed as a Canadian 104 2017 2018 Edit According to a 2017 poll 32 of Canadians up from 30 in 2016 believed that too many refugees were coming to Canada The poll also asked respondents about their comfortability with surface level diversity e g around people of a different race to which 89 said they were comfortable a number that dropped from 94 in 2005 06 105 In 2018 an Angus Reid poll found that two thirds 67 of Canadians agreed that the situation of illegal immigration to Canada constitutes a crisis and that Canada s ability to handle the situation is at a limit Among respondents who voted in the 2015 election 56 of those who voted Liberal and 55 of those who voted NDP agreed that the matter had reached a crisis level agreed upon with 87 of respondents who voted Conservative in the 2015 election Six out of ten respondents also told the pollster that Canada is too generous towards would be refugees a spike of five percentage points since the question was asked the previous year 106 107 2019 Edit EKOS Research Associates in a 2019 poll found that about 40 of Canadians feel that there are too many non white immigrants coming to the country 108 EKOS expressed this number as demonstrating an increase from those who opposed immigration in previous years and as an evidence for resurgence of colonial depictions that can lead to racialization of new non white immigrants 109 110 In a 2019 poll by Leger Marketing 63 of respondents wanted limits to be set on immigration while 37 said immigration should be expanded The results would show a split along party lines as Green and Conservative Party supporters favoured a reduction while Liberal and NDP supporters favoured the opposite Minister of Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Ahmed Hussen felt that the poll results may be indicative of the concerns of some Canadians about housing shortages and the ability of communities to absorb more people 111 2020 Edit In a 2020 poll conducted by Nanos Research Group 17 percent of respondents said an increase to the number of immigrants accepted into the country compared to 2019 was acceptable 36 percent said there should be no change and 40 percent wanted a reduction 112 Rima Wilkes a University of British Columbia professor raised a question about why consultation with First Nations is not made for shaping immigration policies while in almost every aspect there is one when it comes to sharing of unceded land and water resources 113 Canada Border Services Agency CBSA data in 2020 shows that there were 12 122 deportations and out of them 1 657 were administrative removals 114 History of citizenship and emigration EditCitizenship Edit Main article History of British nationality law The word Canadian as a term of nationality or citizenship was first used under the Immigration Act 1910 to designate those British subjects who were domiciled in Canada whereas all other British subjects required permission to land A separate status of Canadian national was created under the Canadian Nationals Act 1921 which would broaden the definition of Canadian to include such citizen s wife and children fathered by the citizen who had not yet landed in Canada After the passage of the Statute of Westminster in 1931 the monarchy ceased to be an exclusively British institution Thus Canadians as well as all others living among what is known today as the Commonwealth realms were regarded as subjects of the Crown However in legal documents the term British subject continued to be used hence Canadians were still officially British subjects born or regularly domiciled in Canada citation needed In 1946 Canada would be the first nation in the then British Commonwealth to establish its own nationality law with the enactment of the Canadian Citizenship Act 1946 taking effect on 1 January 1947 In order to be deemed a Canadian citizen one generally had to be a British subject on the date that the Act took effect or had been admitted to Canada as landed immigrants before that date First Nations people were later included by amendment in 1956 The phrase British subject referred generally to anyone from the United Kingdom its colonies at the time or a Commonwealth country Acquisition and loss of British subject status before 1947 was determined by British law citation needed Many of the provisions to acquire or lose Canadian citizenship that existed under the 1946 legislation were repealed whereby Canadian citizens generally would no longer be subject to involuntary loss of citizenship barring revocation on the grounds of immigration fraud On 15 February 1977 Canada removed restrictions on dual citizenship Present Edit Canada offers Canadian citizenship through naturalization In 2006 the Canadian government reduced the landing fee per immigrant by 50 115 In June 2017 the implementation of the first of a series of important reforms to the Citizenship Act took effect These reforms restored many of the previous requirements that were in place for over 3 decades in Canada before they were removed and replaced with more stringent criteria by the former Conservative government in 2015 The most important of these changes include 116 117 The requirement of permanent residence for 3 out of 5 years during the period immediately prior to filing the application Removal of a physical presence rule Persons aged 14 to 54 years must pass a Canadian knowledge test and demonstrate a basic ability in either of English or French Canada s official languages Revocation of citizenship must follow a more formal and balanced process Emigration Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message While emigration from Canada to the United States has historically exceeded immigration there have been short periods in which the reverse was true such as during the American Revolution with the migration of Loyalist refugees during the various gold rushes of British Columbia and the later Klondike Gold Rush which saw many American prospectors inhabiting B C and the Yukon in the early 20th century when land settlers moved from the Northern Plains to the PrairiesCanada would also see mass emigration during periods of political turmoil or war such as the Vietnam War There are over 1 million Americans living in Canada and over 1 million Canadians living in the US with many millions more who are descendants of Canadian immigrants to the US New England alone is 20 25 of Canadian descent Immigration has always been offset by emigration at times this was of great concerns of governments intent on filling up the country particularly the western provinces The United States was overall the primary destination followed by reverse migration As a result the population of Canada at Confederation 1867 was 3 75 million or 10 of the US population an average that maintained from about 1830 to 1870 This number would drop to 6 by 1900 due to large emigration to the US despite large scale immigration to Canada Emigration to the US was only 370 000 in the 1870s averaged a million a decade from 1880 to 1910 almost 750 000 from 1911 to 1920 and 1 25 million from 1921 to 1930 They consisted of both native born Canadians and recent immigrants from various mostly European nations Between 1945 and 1965 emigration to the US averaged 40 45 000 annually It was not until 1960 that the population of Canada reached the 10 mark again or 18 million As of 2017 with over 35 million people Canada has 10 8 of the population of its southern neighbour In times of economic difficulty Canadian governments frequently resorted to deportation and coerced voluntary deportation to thin out ranks of unemployed workers However by the time of the administration of Mackenzie King it was realized that this was an improvident short term solution that would result in future labour shortages that immigration was initially intended to overcome 118 Immigration categories EditIn current Canadian law immigrants are distinguished by four categories 119 72 Family persons closely related to one or more Canadian residents who live in Canada i Economic skilled workers caregivers or business persons Protected person or Refugee persons who are escaping persecution torture and or cruel and unusual punishment ii Humanitarian or other persons accepted as immigrants for humanitarian or compassionate reasons In March 2019 the Canadian Government announced its Francophone Immigration Strategy as an initiative to increase immigration outside of Quebec for French speaking individuals in all admission categories 72 In 2010 Canada accepted 280 681 immigrants permanent and temporary of which 186 913 67 were Economic immigrants 60 220 22 were Family class 24 696 9 were Refugees and 8 845 2 were others through working holidays internships and studies 120 121 In 2019 with 341 180 admissions Canada achieved its highest level of permanent resident admissions in recent history 72 Economic immigrants Edit The Economic Immigration Class is the largest source of permanent resident admissions in Canada 72 In 2019 196 658 individuals were admitted to Canada under the Economic Class making up approximately 58 of all admissions that year and a 5 5 increase from 2018 This represents a record high number of admissions under this category 72 Year 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019Number of economic immigrants permitted 72 170 390 156 028 159 289 186 366 196 658IRCC uses several sub categories of economic immigrants including skilled workers under the following classes 119 The basic immigration programs that offer permanent admission to Canada to those who are skilled include Quebec skilled worker 122 Federal skilled trades Federal skilled workerThe immigration programs that offer permanent admission to onshore temporary residents or who once were include Canadian experience class the process is applicable to only those who have a Canadian Experience they are eligible to apply to any immigration programs through submitting an online profile to the Express Entry pool The highest ranked candidates are then invited to apply for permanent residence 123 Provincial Nominee Program class PNP Rural and Northern Immigration Program RNIP Regional Immigration Pilot Program RIPP Municipal Nominee Immigration Program MNIP Atlantic Immigration Pilot Program AIPP Yukon Community PilotThe refugee immigration programs that offer permanent admission to Canada include Economic Mobility Pathways Pilot EMPP for displaced personsThe business immigration programs that offer permanent admission to Canada include Quebec Immigrant Investor Program QIIP 68 Quebec Entrepreneur Program Quebec Self Employed Federal Start Up Visa programFederal Start Up Visa program Edit This program grants Canadian permanent residence to qualified entrepreneurs wishing to establish their start up business in Canada Successful candidates must get the support of one or more of the designated organizations Venture capital funds Angel investor groups Business incubators 124 Applicants must also supply proof of sufficient settlement funds to apply for the program 125 Individuals with a certain net worth can also apply for permanent residence via certain programs 126 For business owners and investor immigrants who do not fit into the Start Up business class or Quebec Provincial programs there is a Federal Owner Operator LMIA pathway that if executed correctly can lead to permanent admission to Canada 127 The high profile Skilled worker principal applicants group comprised 19 8 of all immigration in 2005 Canada has also created a VIP Business Immigration Program which allows immigrants with sufficient business experience or management experience to receive the Permanent Residency in a shorter period than other types of immigration As of May 1 2014 the Federal Skilled Worker Class opened once again accepting 25 000 applicants with intake caps at 1 000 per category A New Economic Action Plan 2015 took effect in January 2015 in which the skilled worker program will be more of an employer based program The current list of accepted occupations for 2014 includes many occupations such as senior managers accountants physicians and medical professionals professionals in marketing and advertising real estate professionals and many more 128 A candidate s eligibility for Federal Skilled Worker category is assessed based on six selection factor points and scored on a scale of 100 The current pass mark is 67 points 129 130 Six Selection Factor Points Language skills points Education points Work experience points Age points Arranged employment in Canada points Adaptability pointsThe changes in 2015 moved permanent residency in Canada away from the first come first served model and towards a new structure that took on permanent residents based on Canada s economic need The system is called Express Entry 131 Alberta s Immigrant Nominee Program AINP 132 in particular allows skilled workers along with their families to make application for permanent residency and several large Alberta employers with operations in rural areas actively recruit employees from abroad and support them and their families in seeking permanent residency 75 Canada announced a new immigration quota of 1 2 million for 2021 2023 with targets of 401 000 new permanent residents in year 2021 411 000 in 2022 and 421 000 in 2023 133 In an effort to meet the 2021 target on April 14 2021 Canada created a new immigration pathway to permanent residency for essential workers and international graduates already in Canada Temporary workers with at least one year of Canadian work experience in a health care profession or another pre approved essential occupation and international students who graduated from a Canadian institution in 2017 or later are eligible The maximum numbers of immigrants under this program are 20 000 temporary workers in health care 30 000 temporary workers in other selected essential occupations and 40 000 international students 134 135 Family class Edit Both citizens and permanent residents may sponsor family members to immigrate to Canada as permanent residents under the requirement that the sponsor is able to accept financial responsibility for the individual for a given period of time 72 In 2019 91 311 individuals were admitted under the Family Reunification category which is a 7 2 increase from 2018 and a record high Also that year 80 of parent and grandparent applications were processed within 19 months an improvement from 72 months in 2017 72 Year 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Projected2021 2022 2023Spouse partners and children 49 997 60 955 61 973 67 140 69 298Parent and grandparent 15 489 17 043 20 495 18 030 22 011Total family reunification 72 65 485 77 998 82 468 85 170 91 311 76 000 105 000 74 000 105 000 74 000 106 000Humanitarian and compassionate immigration Edit Canada also grants permanent residency based on humanitarian and compassionate grounds on a case by case basis or certain public policy considerations under exceptional circumstances In 2019 there were 4 681 permanent residents admitted through these streams 72 Year 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019People admitted under humanitarian and compassionate grounds 72 4 315 3 792 3 631 4 026 4 681Refugees and protected persons Edit Further information Canadian refugee law Each year IRCC facilitates the admission of a targeted number of permanent residents under the refugee resettlement category Under Canadian nationality law an immigrant can apply for citizenship after living in Canada for 1095 days 3 years in any five year period provided that they lived in Canada as a permanent resident for at least two of those years 136 Opposition parties have advocated for providing one year free residency permits for refugees as an opportunity to increase their living standards until they are ready to migrate back to their home countries rather than uprooting them from their heritage and culture in forms of relief 137 138 The CBSA is responsible for administering persons who enter Canada through its designated ports of entry POE the Royal Canadian Mounted Police RCMP are responsible for those who enter Canada unlawfully i e enter between designated POEs 139 A person who is seeking asylum in Canada must be first considered eligible by the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada IRB 140 The IRB classifies eligible refugees into two separate categories 140 Convention Refugees Someone who is outside and unable to return to their home country due to a fear of persecution based on several factors including race religion and political opinion This is outlined by the United Nations multilateral treaty Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees Protected Persons Claims for asylum under this category are usually made at a point of entry into Canada Those claiming to be a person in need of protection must be unable to return to their home country safely because they would be subjected to a danger of torture risk for their life or risk of cruel and unusual treatment Refugee statistics by sponsorship 72 Year 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019Blended Sponsorship Refugee 811 4 435 1 285 1 149 993Government Assisted Refugee 9 488 23 628 8 638 8 093 9 951Privately Sponsored Refugee 9 747 18 642 16 699 18 568 19 143Total 20 046 46 705 26 622 27 810 30 087Claiming asylum in Canada Edit nbsp Tents set up on the Canadian side of border between Quebec and New York in 2017 to process asylum applicants entering Canada irregularly Individuals can make an asylum claim in Canada at a port of entry at a CBSA inland office or an IRCC inland office CBSA or IRCC officials will then determine if an individual is eligible to make an asylum claim 139 After entry an interview for eligibility is conducted to deem whether the asylum seeker is allowed or declined admission into Canada Those who are admitted submit their reasons for admissibility in writing The IRB hears their case after 60 days in favorable terms the claimants are accepted as refugees 141 If the claims are not deemed appropriate by the interviewer the asylum seeker may be deported According to the Canadian government anyone can make a claim for refugee protection once they are physically present in Canada regardless of how they arrived in the country This includes those who have entered Canada without proper documentation or who have overstayed their visas Asylum seekers can make a claim at a port of entry such as an airport or border crossing or at an inland office of Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada IRCC 142 It is important to note that claiming asylum in Canada can be a complex and lengthy process and there are many factors that can affect an individual s chances of success For example the availability of evidence to support the individual s claim the individual s ability to communicate effectively in English or French and the political climate in their home country can all have an impact on the outcome of the asylum claim 143 There are many instances in which claims have been deemed ineligible for referral to the IRB notably those by migrants who seek entry into Canada through the United States where the Safe Third Country Agreement STCA is applied 140 The STCA dictates persons seeking asylum must make their claim in the first country in which they arrive either the US or Canada unless they qualify for an exception Therefore if an asylum seeker were to enter the US as a non U S citizen make their way to the Canada U S land border and then attempt to enter Canada with a claim for asylum they would be denied entry under the STCA The Agreement is responsible for limiting refugee eligibility to enter Canada and the rejection of several hundred claims a year since its implementation 144 The CBSA reported that 6 000 14 000 claims were made before the implementation of the STCA and dropped to an average of 4 000 claims per year after its implementation 145 Asylum claimants have been subjected to indirect refoulment a consequence of a person s claim in Canada being refused under the STCA subjecting them to deportation to the destination in which the person was originally seeking asylum from due to more conservative immigration and refugee policies in the U S 146 Protected persons Edit The IRCC provides support for protected persons and their dependants whereby protected persons are defined as asylum claimants who are granted protected status by Canada In 2019 18 443 individuals obtained permanent residence under the protected persons in Canada and dependents abroad category 72 Year 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019People admitted as protected persons and dependents 72 12 068 12 209 14 499 17 683 18 443Refugees in detention Edit As part of the passing of Bill C 31 in December 2012 asylum seekers arriving at a point of entry on the Canada United States border have been subject to incarceration and detention 147 Claimants are subject to detention for failing to provide sufficient identification documents which is in violation with the United Nations Refugee Convention to which Canada is a signatory 147 In 2010 2011 Canada detained 8 838 people of which 4 151 of them were asylum seekers or rejected refugee claimants 148 There is a requirement to the maximum time limit spent in detention upon being released a situation which has been subject to criticism held in contrast to areas in Europe Ireland 30 days France 32 days Spain 40 days and Italy 60 days 148 Refugees programs Edit The IRCC funds several programs that provide supports and services to resettled refugees 139 The Private Sponsorship of Refugees Program is an initiative whereby refugees may resettle in Canada with support and funding from private or joint government private sponsorship 149 Established under Operation Lifeline in 1978 150 the program has since resettled and provided support for over 200 000 refugees 151 under various initiatives and with fluctuating annual intakes 152 Pre departure services backed by IRCC include Canadian Orientation Abroad training and coverage for certain medical services received prior to arriving in Canada All resettled refugees in Canada receive temporary health care coverage the IRCC along with civil society and sponsorship organizations also provide 139 income support immediate and essential supports and services upon arrival e g housing assistance in securing housing settlement services including language training Other refugee support programsAsylum statistics Edit Individuals can make an asylum claim in Canada at a port of entry at a CBSA inland office or an IRCC inland office CBSA or IRCC officials will then determine if an individual is eligible to make an asylum claim 139 Asylum claimants processed by the IRCC and CBSA Jan Nov 2020 139 Province Territory CBSA ports of entry CBSA inland office CBSA total IRCC total CBSA and IRCC totalAlberta 85 a 85 760 845British Columbia 225 140 365 1 705 2 070Manitoba 30 30 135 165New Brunswick 5 0 5 30 35Newfoundland and Labrador 0 5 5Nunavut 0 0 0 0 0Northwest Territories 0 0 0 0 0Nova Scotia 55 55Ontario 2 070 95 2165 7 875 10 040Prince Edward Island 0 0 0 10 10Quebec 4 730 80 4810 4 575 9 385Saskatchewan 5 5 30 35Yukon 0 0 0 0Total 7 150 315 7 465 15 180 22 645 All values between 0 and 5 are shown as in order to prevent individuals from being identified when data is compiled and compared to other publicly available statistics All other values are rounded to the closest multiple of 5 for the same reason as a result of rounding data may not sum to the totals indicated RCMP interceptions Jan Nov 2020 139 Province Territory TotalAlberta 0British Columbia 76Manitoba 26New Brunswick 0Newfoundland and Labrador 1Nunavut 0Northwest Territories 0Nova Scotia 0Ontario 0Prince Edward Island 0Quebec 3 163Saskatchewan 0Yukon 0Total 3 266Francophone Immigration Strategy Edit In March 2019 the Canadian Government announced its Francophone Immigration Strategy purposed to achieve a target of 4 4 of French speaking immigrants of all admissions outside of Quebec by 2023 72 The strategy s Welcoming Francophone Communities Initiative provides 12 6 million to 14 selected communities 2020 to 2023 for projects to support and welcome French speaking newcomers In 2019 IRCC s Settlement Program launched new official language training services for French speaking newcomers who settle in Francophone communities outside of Quebec Seven organizations were selected to receive up to 7 6 million over 4 years 72 French speaking permanent residents admitted outside Quebec in 2019 72 Immigration categories Total PercentageEconomic class 5 523 65 Family sponsored 1 420 17 Resettled refugees and protected persons iii 1 445 17 Other immigrants 81 1 Total 8 469 100 Accommodations and Inclusivity EditDisabilities Edit In 2011 and 2012 several families were denied immigration to Canada because members of their family have an autism spectrum diagnosis and Citizenship and Immigration Canada now IRCC felt the potential cost of care for those family members would place an excessive demand on health or social services 153 154 People with autism disorders can be accepted if they are able to depend on themselves 154 According to the Canadian Human Rights Act discrimination based on disability is prohibited in all areas of society including housing Therefore it is essential for the accommodation industry in Canada to provide accessible accommodations for disabled people There are various types of accommodations available in Canada for disabled people including hotels motels bed and breakfasts resorts and other types of lodging 155 The housing and support services for individuals with disabilities are the focus of several non profit organizations in Canada The Canadian Association for Community Living CACL is one such group that promotes the rights of those with disabilities and offers housing and other services to both individuals and families Several housing initiatives including group homes and supportive housing are run by the CACL around the nation 156 Job market and education Edit The federal government was asked by businesses to expand programs for professional immigrants to get Canadian qualifications in their fields In response the Multiculturalism Act of 1988 was passed and Canadian Council on Learning was created by the federal government to promote best practices in workplace learning Additionally the credentials of immigrant workers are assessed through Canadian agencies by the IRCC for immigration 157 Ideally this credential equalization assessment reduces the gap between education and suitable jobs However strains of discrimination i e statistical discrimination lead to a systemic process of rejecting and discouraging immigrants racialization which is an antithesis for an anti oppressive culture 158 159 160 161 In 2023 discrimination against immigrants in Canada based on their origin and color was reported to be at a high 22 percent 162 In 2022 a significant portion 43 47 of late Generation Y and Generation Z the working population in Canada finds that their country and societal systems have a racial bias 163 A 2021 study reveals that 71 percent of the Canadian workforce experienced workplace harassment and violence and workplace prevention policies for penalizing harassers were mostly just paper tigers and remained only on paper 164 Across Canada businesses have proposed to allow unpaid or basic pay internships as part of a rewards system which were considered illegal both in government and private in many provinces at the time which posed a major obstacle to integrate immigrants into the job market The lack of collective ethnic bargaining and active citizenship from minority immigrants and the lack of policy leadership in this sector from the government has resulted in a catch 22 situation in which employers want job experience but potential employees cannot get Canadian experience without first working in Canadian jobs internships The Ontario Human Rights Commission has acknowledged the racist effects of Canadian work experience requirement for jobs and has declared it to be prima facie discrimination and an inadmissible criterion for exclusion of applicants However this and the employment equity act has not translated into a nationwide inclusive policy 165 An article points out that simply increasing immigration levels without considering the underlying issues in the labor market may not effectively address skills shortages or unemployment rates Experts emphasize the importance of aligning immigration policies with targeted skills training programs to ensure that incoming immigrants possess the skills needed in the labor market Furthermore they stress the significance of investing in education and upskilling programs for both newcomers and the existing workforce to bridge the skills gap 77 The 1966 White Paper on Immigration advocated for the selection of skilled immigrants as an influx of unskilled immigrants during a strong economy could exacerbate poverty issues during economic downturns In 1994 the Chretien Liberals prioritized immigrants with skills and abilities conducive to higher incomes and economic growth reducing reliance on social welfare However despite the White Paper on Immigration s anti discriminatory stance achieving full economic and social inclusion for immigrants remained elusive They often encounter explicit and implicit oppression due to the absence of policies aimed at preventing and penalizing it This policy of inaction echoes historical Canadian policies that marginalized Chinese immigrants following the completion of the railway in 1885 166 167 Many observe Canada faces the same soft trade barriers that it has been facing for more than half a century with regards to helping immigrants transition into careers they were trained for or to better careers even with Canada s modern educational capacity and political opportunity that can fix them 24 Quebec Edit Main article Ministry of Immigration Francisation and Integration In 2017 the Province of Quebec stated that they will prohibit offering or receiving public services for individuals who cover their face such as those who wear chadors niqabs or burqas The reasoning behind the bill was to ensure protection of Quebecois but the discriminatory strain of the political ideology was reported to be aimed at articles of certain religious faiths The bill would come under question of in regards to Canadian policy on religious tolerance and accommodation 168 169 170 A qualitative study found that taste based discrimination is more prevalent in cities than semi urban areas as major factors that contribute to less hostility seem to be regional differences in industrial composition and attendant labour demand 171 172 There have been demands for the province to charge additional fees from immigrants before landing in Quebec Quebecois have also urged the province to impose French language training in order for newcomers to become better integrated with the language and culture of their communities As a result the government initiated a subsidized linguistic integration program in 2019 173 Recently the province saw a 20 gap in earnings between immigrants and Canadian born individuals in Quebec largely due to the discrepancy between their respective literacy rates citation needed In 2008 the Canadian Council on Learning reported that almost half of Canadian adults fall below the internationally accepted literacy standard for coping in a modern society 174 In late 2019 under Coalition Avenir Quebec CAQ government they introduced a Quebec values test where immigrants would have to pass 175 176 177 178 179 During the 2022 Quebec general election the Coalition Avenir Quebec CAQ government of Francois Legault which increased it majority ran on getting more immigration powers from Canada to the Province of Quebec 180 181 Legault has raised the idea of even having referendum on immigration powers 182 183 184 After their election win they repeated their pledge for Quebec getting more immigration powers 185 186 See also Edit nbsp History portal nbsp Canada portalCanada immigration statistics Visa policy of Canada Canada Citizenship and Immigration v Khosa History of Chinese immigration to Canada Ministry of Immigration Diversity and Inclusion government of Quebec s immigration department Top 25 Canadian Immigrants Award Immigrant benefits urban legend a hoax regarding benefits comparison Immigration Watch Canada a lobby group pushing for cutting immigration to Canada Century Initiative a lobby group pushing for increased immigration to CanadaNotes Edit The family category can be subdivided into a spouse partner and children b parents and grandparents and c other includes orphaned brother sister nephew niece and grandchild and other relatives Hussen 2017 The Protected Persons and Refugees category can be subdivided into a Protected Persons in Canada and Dependants Abroad b Government Assisted Refugees GARs c Blended Visa Office Referred Refugees and d Privately Sponsored Refugees Hussen 2017 Resettled refugees and protected persons in Canada and dependants abroadReferences Edit a b Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2022 10 26 Immigrants make up the largest share of the population in over 150 years and continue to shape who we are as Canadians www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 11 06 Pison Gilles 2019 February The number and proportion of immigrants in the population International comparisons Population amp Societies 563 France Institut National d etudes demographiques a b Cheatham Amelia 2020 August 3 What Is Canada s Immigration Policy Council on Foreign Relations a b c d Belshaw John Douglas 2016 Post War Immigration Ch 5 11 in Canadian History Post Confederation BC Open Textbook Project ISBN 978 1 989623 12 1 Edmonston Barry Fong Eric 2011 The Changing Canadian Population McGill Queen s University Press p 181 ISBN 978 0 7735 3793 4 Hollifield James Martin Philip Orrenius Pia 2014 Controlling Immigration A Global Perspective 3rd ed Stanford University Press p 11 ISBN 978 0 8047 8627 0 Beaujot Roderic P Kerr Donald W 2007 The Changing Face of Canada Essential Readings in Population Canadian Scholars Press p 178 ISBN 978 1 55130 322 2 Sangani Priyanka February 15 2022 Canada to take in 1 3 million immigrants in 2022 24 The Economic Times Archived from the original on February 15 2022 Ottawa reveals plan to welcome 500 000 immigrants per year by 2025 CBC News CBC 2022 11 01 Retrieved 2022 11 24 Grubel Herbert G 2009 The Effects of Mass Immigration on Canadian Living Standards and Society Fraser Institute p 5 ISBN 978 0 88975 246 7 2019 Annual Report to Parliament on Immigration PDF Minister of Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Retrieved December 19 2020 Jason Markusoff January 23 2019 Canada now brings in more refugees than the U S Maclean s Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2022 10 26 Visible minority and population group by generation status Canada provinces and territories census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations with parts www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 11 06 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2022 09 08 Canada in 2041 A larger more diverse population with greater differences between regions www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 11 05 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2022 09 08 Projected population by racialized group generation status and other selected characteristics x 1 000 www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 11 05 Parties prepare to battle for Immigrant votes CTV News Bell Media 14 March 2010 Archived from the original on 2010 03 16 Retrieved 2010 03 15 Canada wants to attract more immigrants The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 2023 03 02 Drummond Don Fong Francis 2010 An economics perspective on Canadian immigration Policy Options The Economics of Increasing Immigration During an Economic Crisis Worthwhile Canadian Initiative Retrieved 2023 03 02 Carlson Kathryn Blaze 2011 05 17 Immigrants cost 23B a year Fraser Institute report nationalpost Hopper Tristin 2023 01 06 Is an opaque U S consultancy behind Canada s dramatic spike in immigration National Post Why 100M www centuryinitiative ca Retrieved 2023 02 25 a b Rhetoric vs Results Shaping Policy to Benefit Canada s Middle Class Public Policy Forum Retrieved 2023 03 02 a b CIBC s Dodig warns Canada risks largest social crisis if housing supply immigration don t match Financial Post 2023 02 15 Snapshot of racialized Poverty in Canada Canada ca 2018 02 22 Archived from the original on 2018 02 22 Retrieved 2023 03 02 Reitz Jeffrey G 2007 03 01 Immigrant Employment Success in Canada Part II Understanding the Decline Journal of International Migration and Integration Revue de l integration et de la migration internationale 8 1 37 62 doi 10 1007 s12134 007 0002 3 ISSN 1874 6365 S2CID 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and Canadians Colonies Grow Up Linksnorth com 2006 10 12 Retrieved 2010 07 29 Smith Marina L 2000 The Immigration and Naturalization Service INS at the U S Canadian Border 1893 1993 An Overview of Issues and Topics Michigan Historical Review 26 2 127 47 a b c Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2018 05 17 150 years of immigration in Canada www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2022 09 04 Hall Clifford Sifton Immigration and Settlement Policy 1896 1905 Woodsworth James Shaver 1911 Strangers Within Our Gates Or Coming Canadians F C Stephenson pp 171 Ward W Peter 1990 White Canada Forever Popular Attitudes and Public Policy Toward Orientals in British Columbia McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 978 0 7735 0824 8 Canada Library and Archives 2012 04 13 Chinese www bac lac gc ca Retrieved 2020 07 19 Canada Employment and Social Development 2006 06 22 Prime Minister Harper Offers Full Apology for the Chinese Head Tax gcnws Retrieved 2020 07 19 Smith Carrie Ann Italian Immigration at Pier 21 PDF 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2011 About Canada Immigration Fernwood Pub Halifax NS ICI Radio Canada ca Zone Politique Il y a 50 ans le Quebec se dotait d un ministere de l Immigration Radio Canada ca in Canadian French Retrieved 2018 11 04 Elspeth Cameron 2004 Multiculturalism and Immigration in Canada An Introductory Reader Canadian Scholars Press p 118 ISBN 978 1 55130 249 2 Is the current model of immigration the best one for Canada The Globe and Mail Canada December 12 2005 retrieved August 16 2006 Shingler Benjamin October 1 2018 Here are the priorities of Quebec s new CAQ government CBC News Retrieved November 25 2019 The inside story of Jason Kenney s campaign to win over ethnic votes Maclean s Retrieved 2019 11 16 a b Bascaramurty Dakshana 1 November 2017 Canada aims for immigration boost to buttress economy as population ages The Globe and Mail Retrieved 23 June 2018 Grant Tavia 28 September 2016 320 000 newcomers came to Canada in past year highest number since 1971 The Globe and Mail Retrieved 13 October 2016 IRCC 3 March 2016 Express Entry Year End Report 2015 Canada ca Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2018 10 10 a b James Hollifield Philip Martin Pia Orrenius 2014 Controlling Immigration A Global Perspective Third Edition Stanford University Press p 11 ISBN 978 0 8047 8627 0 Freeman Gary P Randall Hansen David L Leal 2013 Immigration and Public Opinion in Liberal Democracies Routledge p 8 ISBN 978 1 136 21161 4 Markus Andrew 2014 Attitudes to immigration and cultural diversity in Australia Journal of Sociology 50 1 10 22 Holliday Ian research associate Spirituality in a changing world Half say faith is important to how they consider society s problems PDF Angus Reid Institute public opinion poll p 15 Retrieved 4 May 2020 a b Statistics Canada 1 November 2017 Immigration and ethnocultural diversity Key results from the 2016 Census The Daily StatCan Government of Canada Retrieved 23 June 2018 a b Canada Admissions of permanent resident by province territory of intended destination and immigration category Open Government May 31 2020 Is Canada asking countries for a million immigrants BBC News June 6 2019 Sangani Priyanka February 15 2022 Canada to take in 1 3 million immigrants in 2022 24 The Economic Times Canada Why the country wants to bring in 1 5m immigrants by 2025 BBC News 2022 11 22 Retrieved 2022 11 24 Government of Canada Statistics Canada 2013 Censuses of Canada 1665 to 1871 Estimated population of Canada 1605 to present Retrieved 2022 10 30 a b IRCC 2019 Statistics and Open Data Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada Ottawa Government of Canada Statistics and Open Data 31 March 2007 Archived from the original on 2016 12 22 Retrieved 2020 01 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Retrieved 5 May 2020 Canada to admit nearly 1 million immigrants over next 3 years CBC News Retrieved 27 May 2018 Canada to take 1 million immigrants by 2020 Sbs com au Retrieved 27 May 2018 Canada to Admit Almost a Million Immigrants Over Next Three Years Bloomberg com 2 November 2017 Retrieved 27 May 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r IRCC 2020 October 30 2020 Annual Report to Parliament on Immigration Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada ISSN 1706 3329 When immigration goes awry Archived 2013 01 16 at the Wayback Machine Toronto Star 14 July 2006 Retrieved 5 August 2006 Allen Jeff Farber Steven Greaves Stephen Clifton Geoffrey Wu Hao Sarkar Somwrita Levinson David M 2021 10 01 Immigrant settlement patterns transit accessibility and transit use Journal of Transport Geography 96 103187 doi 10 1016 j jtrangeo 2021 103187 ISSN 0966 6923 a b c Tweedie Gregory Dressler Anja Schmidt Cora Leah 2018 11 12 Supporting Reconnecting Immigrant Families with English Language Learners in Rural Schools An Exploratory Study of Filipino Arrivals to Alberta Retrieved 17 November 2018 Nojoud Al Mallees 2023 01 13 Liberal minister says 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seekers crossing into Canada illegally A look at facts behind the controversy The Globe and Mail Retrieved 14 October 2019 Illegal or irregular What s the proper term for Canada s border crossers CTV News 28 August 2018 Retrieved 14 October 2019 Woods Allan 2017 08 23 Canada is not a safe haven for asylum seekers Trudeau warns The Toronto Star ISSN 0319 0781 Retrieved 2017 10 16 Trudeau says steps to tackle spike in asylum seekers yielding positive results CBC News Retrieved 2017 10 16 Trudeau lashes out at Conservatives for whipping up fear over immigration CBC News Stafford Debrah 2005 Juvenile Detention Fact Sheet PsycEXTRA Dataset doi 10 1037 e571492006 006 Retrieved 2023 03 05 Nardi Christopher 2023 06 20 Ottawa allowed in half of foreign nationals red flagged as security risks audit finds National Post Government of Canada Canada Border Services Agency 2023 02 24 Evaluation of the Immigration National Security Screening Program Executive summary and introduction www cbsa asfc gc ca Retrieved 2023 06 24 Settlement Worker Alternative Jobs settlement org About Us MNLCT Retrieved 2022 12 08 Mennonite New Life Centre of Toronto Mennonite Archives of Ontario 2012 05 03 Retrieved 2022 12 08 Canada wants to diversify international student intake Canada Immigration News 26 August 2019 Facing mounting debt Laurentian University files for creditor protection RCI English 2 February 2021 Douglas Todd Canada s foreign student policy needs public review say experts Vancouver Sun Tomlinson Kathy 31 May 2019 Employers taking cash from foreign workers seeking permanent resident status in Canada The Globe and Mail The Globe and Mail Once a refugee now a social worker Truck News Archived from the original on 2021 01 28 Thousands join effort to stop international student from being deported for working too hard he says CBC News URSU calling for permanent resident status for international students Regina Leader Post Kurl Shachi exec director 3 October 2016 What makes us Canadian A study of values beliefs priorities and identity Angus Reid public opinion poll The Angus Reid Institute and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 2016 11 09 Influential Liberal advisers want Canadian population to triple by 2100 Global News October 23 2016 Galbraith Nora 14 August 2019 Population Projections for Canada 2018 to 2068 Provinces and Territories 2018 to 2043 Technical Report on Methodology and Assumptions www150 statcan gc ca Statistics Canada Reid Angus 4 October 2016 Canadians aren t as accepting as we think and we can t ignore it writes Angus Reid CBC News Canadian Broadcasting Corporation The Canadian Press 7 November 2017 Canadian attitudes towards immigration hardening poll suggests Toronto Star Retrieved 5 May 2020 Maloney Ryan 3 August 2018 Most Canadians Say Irregular Border Crossings Are A Crisis Poll Suggests HuffPost Canada Retrieved 2019 10 23 Grenier Eric 3 August 2018 Justin Trudeau is losing the argument on border crossings poll suggests CBC News Toronto Canadian Broadcasting Corporation EKOS Politics 15 October 2019 Increased Polarization on Attitudes to Immigration Reshaping the Political Landscape in Canada EKOS Politics Ottawa EKOS Research Associates Retrieved 2019 12 18 Maloney Ryan 16 April 2019 Survey Shows Clear Racial Discrimination On Immigration Issue Pollster HuffPost Canada Retrieved 2019 10 23 Sakamoto I Jeyapal D Bhuyan R Ku J Fang L Zhang H and Genovese F An overview of discourses of skilled immigrants and Canadian experience An English language print media analysis Toronto ON CERIS The Ontario Metropolis Centre Wright Thersea 16 Jun 2019 Poll suggests majority of Canadians favour limiting immigration levels CBC News Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Bolongaro Kait Hagan Shelly 6 November 2020 Trudeau s plan to ramp up immigration falls flat with Canadians BNN Bloomberg Retrieved 2 March 2021 Todd Douglas What do Indigenous voices say about immigration vancouversun Canada deported thousands of people in 2020 even as pandemic raged data show Promoting opportunity for new Canadians Prime Minister of Canada Archived 2006 09 14 at the Wayback Machine Pm gc ca 2006 05 12 Retrieved on 2013 07 12 Colin Singer June 15 2015 Canada Canada Citizenship Reform A Comparative Analysis CCIRC Canadian Citizenship amp Immigration Resource Centre Retrieved December 26 2015 Canadian Citizenship Second Wave Of Changes Take Effect October 11 2017 Includes Audio Immigration Canada Mondaq com Retrieved 2018 02 14 Cook Tim Mackenzie King and the War Effort The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved 2018 02 14 a b 2019 Annual Report to Parliament on Immigration PDF Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada Retrieved 13 July 2020 CIC Facts and figures 2010 Immigration overview Permanent and temporary residents Citizenship amp Immigration Canada Ottawa Government of Canada Archived from the original 2011 11 22 Retrieved 17 November 2011 Moving2Canada Working Holiday Visa in Canada guide retrieved March 24 2016 Canada IRCC 31 March 2007 Immigrate as a Quebec selected skilled worker Canada ca Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2018 03 19 IRCC 17 September 2008 Who can apply Canadian Experience Class Express Entry Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2018 03 19 Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada 2013 03 28 List of designated organizations start up visa www canada ca Retrieved 2022 07 24 Immigrate with a start up visa Who can apply Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada 28 March 2013 Retrieved 2022 07 29 IRCC December 2017 Immigrant Investor Venture Capital Pilot Program Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2018 03 19 McKinsley Sean Owner Operator Investment LMIA Stream Opportunities for Businesses amp Entrepreneurs Canada Immigration amp Visa Services Retrieved 17 May 2019 Offering Express Entry to Qualified Economic Immigrants Actively Recruiting Talented Newcomers For the Benefit of Canada s Economy Archived Government of Canada April 8 2014 Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada 31 March 2007 Six selection factors Federal Skilled Worker Program Express Entry www canada ca Retrieved 2020 10 08 Selection Factor Points Calculator Immiboards com Retrieved 2020 10 08 Immigrate to Canada with Express Entry Immiboards com Retrieved 2020 10 08 Alberta Immigrant Nominee Program AINP Canada to target over 400 000 immigrants per year Canada Immigration News 30 October 2020 Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada 2021 04 14 Temporary public policy to facilitate the granting of permanent residence for foreign nationals in Canada outside of Quebec with a recent credential from a Canadian post secondary institution aem Retrieved 2021 05 17 Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada 2021 04 14 New pathway to permanent residency for over 90 000 essential temporary workers and international graduates gcnws Retrieved 2021 05 17 CIC 2010 Residence Calculator Citizenship and Immigration Canada Archived from the original on 2012 01 03 Retrieved 2011 11 19 Markusoff Jason 10 Jan 2018 Canada s failing refugee system is leaving thousands in limbo Maclean s Retrieved 24 July 2018 Harris Kathleen 21 January 2018 Less than half the people deported from Canada in 2017 paid their own way home CBC News CBC Radio Canada Retrieved 24 July 2018 a b c d e f g Asylum claims by year 2020 Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada 2020 December 21 a b c IRCC 31 March 2007 Find out if you re eligible Refugee status from inside Canada Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2018 04 04 Bellemare Andrea 25 August 2017 How asylum seekers make refugee claims and why they take so long CBC News Branch Legislative Services 2022 12 15 Consolidated federal laws of Canada Immigration and Refugee Protection Act laws lois justice gc ca Retrieved 2023 03 05 Marshall Barbara 2000 Closer integration or re nationalization Recent trends in EU migration and asylum policies The case of Germany Journal of European Integration 22 4 409 432 doi 10 1080 07036330008429093 ISSN 0703 6337 S2CID 154945031 Arbel Efrat 2013 03 01 Shifting Borders and the Boundaries of Rights Examining the Safe Third Country Agreement between Canada and the United States International Journal of Refugee Law 25 1 65 86 doi 10 1093 ijrl eet002 ISSN 0953 8186 Marwah Sonal Ball Michelle Autumn 2017 Is the Safe Third Country Agreement putting refugee claimants at risk Ploughshares Monitor 38 3 5 9 Foster Michelle Fall 2008 Responsibility Sharing or Shifting Safe Third Countries and International Law Refuge 25 2 64 78 doi 10 25071 1920 7336 26032 a b Dawson Carrie 2014 Refugee Hotels The Discourse of Hospitality and the Rise of Immigration Detention in Canada University of Toronto Quarterly 83 4 826 846 doi 10 3138 utq 83 4 826 S2CID 161756804 a b Silverman Stephanie J Molnar Petra 2016 03 01 Everyday Injustices Barriers to Access to Justice for Immigration Detainees in Canada Refugee Survey Quarterly 35 1 109 127 doi 10 1093 rsq hdv016 ISSN 1020 4067 IRCC November 2003 Guide to the Private Sponsorship of Refugees Program Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2018 03 30 Zifi J 2016 Syrian refugee resettlement in Canada an auto ethnographic account of sponsorship Canadian Association for Refugee and Forced Migration Studies University of Toronto Retrieved 29 March 2018 About refugees and Canada s response Canadian Council for Refugees Retrieved 2018 03 30 Labman Shauna 2016 Private Sponsorship Complementary or Conflicting Interests Refuge 32 2 67 80 doi 10 25071 1920 7336 40266 Merti Steve 31 March 2012 American UVic prof forced to leave Canada after immigration rules son s autism too big a taxpayer burden Daily Brew via Yahoo News a b Wallace Kenyon 9 June 2011 Family faces deportation over son s autism Toronto Star Canada 1989 Canadian Human Rights Act R S 1985 c H 6 amended by R S c 1985 c 31 1st Supp R S c 1985 c 32 2nd Supp Loi canadienne sur les droits de la personne L R 1985 ch H 6 modifiee par L R 1985 ch 31 1er suppl L R 1985 ch 32 2e suppl Supply and Services Canada Approvisionnements et services Canada ISBN 0 662 56727 7 OCLC 20355658 Housing Inclusion Canada Retrieved 2023 03 05 CIC 30 January 2020 2012 Where can I get an Educational Credential Assessment ECA Citizenship and Immigration Canada Government of Canada Hendry Leah 25 September 2018 I didn t come here to live this kind of life Skilled immigrants on desperate hunt for jobs in Quebec CBC News Montreal Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Reitz Jeffrey G 2007 Immigrant Employment Success in Canada Part I Individual and Contextual Causes Journal of International Migration and Integration 8 11 36 doi 10 1007 s12134 007 0001 4 Raza Muhammad Roderic Beaujot and Gebremariam Woldemicael 2012 Social Capital and Economic Integration of Visible Minority Immigrants in Canada Journal of International Migration and Integration 14 doi 10 1007 s12134 012 0239 3 Collie Meghan 25 June 2019 Canada has a discrimination problem when it comes to hiring here s why Global News Corus Entertainment Retrieved 2019 10 23 Canada visible minorities facing discrimination by type and gender Statista Canada views on the country s racism by age 2021 Statista Workplace harassment and violence impacts over 70 of employees in Canada study shows CBC News 2022 03 30 Policy on Removing the Canadian experience barrier PDF Ontario Human Rights Commission 2013 Canada Canada Citizenship and Immigration 1994 Into the 21st Century A Strategy for Immigration and Citizenship Minister of Supply and Services Canada ISBN 978 0 662 22739 7 Ferguson Ted 1975 A White Man s Country An Exercise in Canadian Prejudice Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 11400 4 Bergeron Patrice 24 October 2017 Quebec to prohibit government employees from wearing Muslim chador niqab and burka The Canadian Press via CTV News Peritz Ingrid 18 October 2017 Quebec bans face covering in public services raising worries among Muslims The Globe and Mail Montreal CBC News staff 16 August 2017 No niqabs on public buses Confusion reigns after surprise amendments to Quebec bill CBC News Montreal Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Magesan Arvind 25 October 2015 New figures show just how big Canada s immigrant wage gap is Maclean s StatCan 25 October 2017 Census in Brief Linguistic integration of immigrants and official language populations in Canada 2016 Census Program Census in Brief Statistics Canada Government of Canada Apprendre le francais CCIL 2008 Reading the Future Planning to Meet Canada s Future Literacy Needs Ottawa ON Canadian Council on Learning Quebec to impose a values test on immigrants as of Jan 1 30 October 2019 Newcomers to Quebec will have to pass values test 31 October 2019 Here s a sample of the questions on Quebec s new values test CBC News Quebec introduces values test for immigrants Business Standard India 31 October 2019 Quebec Immigration Minister working on French language values test for newcomers Montreal Globalnews ca Legault hopes for strong mandate in election to pressure Ottawa on immigration Stevenson Verity 2022 05 29 Legault pledges to demand more control from Ottawa over immigration to Quebec CBC News Archived from the original on 2023 03 02 Trudeau maintains position on immigration in face of Legault s demands 5 October 2022 Quebec already has the tools in hand to choose immigrants Federal minister Keep going Legault s victory message suggests he ll seek more liberty and more leeway with Ottawa say observers 4 October 2022 CAQ renews call for more immigration powers at post election caucus meeting Montreal Globalnews ca CAQ refuses to take no for an answer after Trudeau shuts door on immigration request 6 October 2022 Further reading EditFurther information Bibliography of Canadian demographics History Edit Adelman Howard Borowski Allan Burstein Meyer and Foster Lois eds Immigration and Refugee Policy Australia and Canada Compared 1996 Avery Donald H Reluctant Host Canada s Response to Immigrant Workers 1896 1994 1996 Carment David Bercuson David Jay 2008 The World in Canada Diaspora Demography and Domestic Politics McGill Queen s Univ Press ISBN 9780773532960 Dirks Gerald E May 1 1977 Canada s Refugee Policy Indifference or Opportunism McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 0296 3 Hall D J 1977 Howard Palmer ed Clifford Sifton Immigration and Settlement Policy 1896 1905 The Settlement of the West pp 60 85 Hawkins Freda 1990 Critical Years in Immigration Canada and Australia Compared McGill Queen s Press ISBN 9780773508521 Kelley Ninette Trebilcock Michael J 2010 The Making of the Mosaic A History of Canadian Immigration Policy 2nd ed University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 9536 7 Knowles Valerie 2008 Strangers at Our Gates Canadian Immigration and Immigration Policy 1540 2006 a standard scholarly history Lacroix Patrick 2016 From Strangers to Humanity First Canadian Social Democracy and Immigration Policy 1932 1961 Canadian Journal of History 51 1 58 82 doi 10 3138 cjh ach 51 1 003 S2CID 147861807 McLean Lorna To Become Part of Us Ethnicity Race Literacy and the Canadian Immigration Act of 1919 Canadian Ethnic Studies 36 2 2004 pp 1 28 Magocsi Paul R 1999 Encyclopedia of Canada s peoples Peykovska Penka 2022 The First Generations of Bulgarians in Canada In Migration and Social Development Vol 2 pp 15 64 BAS IHS ISBN 978 954 2903 54 3 Powell John 2005 Encyclopedia of North American Immigration Facts On File ISBN 978 0 8160 4658 4 Timlin Mabel F November 1960 Canada s Immigration Policy 1896 1910 Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science 26 4 517 532 doi 10 2307 138931 JSTOR 138931 Walker Barrington 2008 The History of Immigration and Racism in Canada Essential Readings Canadian Scholars Press ISBN 978 1 55130 340 6Guides Edit Adu Febiri Francis 2009 Succeeding from the margins of Canadian society a strategic resource for new immigrants refugees and international students CCB Pub ISBN 978 1 926585 27 7 Kranc Benjamin A Constantin Elena 2004 Getting into Canada How to Make a Successful Application for Permanent Residence How To Books ISBN 978 1 85703 929 0 DeRocco John F Chabot 2008 From Sea to Sea to Sea A Newcomer s Guide to Canada Full Blast Productions ISBN 978 0 9784738 4 6 Driedger Leo Halli Shivalingappa S 1999 Immigrant Canada Demographic Economic and Social Shallenges University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 4276 7 Moens Alexander Collacott Martin 2008 Immigration Policy and the Terrorist Threat in Canada and the United States Fraser Institute ISBN 978 0 88975 235 1 Noorani Nick Noorani Sabrina 2008 Arrival Survival Canada A Handbook for New Immigrants Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 542891 9Other Edit Can Canada Handle a Polite Rational and Fact Based debate on immigration Herbert Grubel David Suzuki s statements on immigration to Canada Marsden Lorna Population Issues in the Immigration Debate Canadian Ethnic Studies Etudes Ethniques au Canada 7 1 1975 22 External links EditHistory of Canadian immigration at Marianopolis College Library and Archives Canada Going to Canada Immigration Portal A source of free and useful information for newcomers and prospective immigrants to Canada Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Immigration to Canada amp oldid 1180915439, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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