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ARTICLES

The distinctiveness of Canadian immigration experience

Pages 518-538 | Published online: 28 Aug 2012
 

ABSTRACT

Canada's experience with immigration has been comparatively positive and mass immigration has considerable popular support within the country. The distinctive Canadian policy model—including large numbers with skill-based selection, multiculturalism and other policies aimed at promoting integration, and provincial autonomy—deserves international attention. However, Canada's success with immigration is only partly related to its policies and these may not be easily transferable to other contexts. Skill-based immigrant selection may be the most important feature of the Canadian model contributing to its success, and the effectiveness of this policy is clearly contingent on border control, which in the case of Canada is facilitated by geographical isolation. Canada's symbolic commitment to multiculturalism emphasizes the social integration of immigrants and this goal is also served by significant social services supporting settlement and language acquisition. The most significant distinctive feature of the Canadian approach to immigration may be the belief that immigration represents a positive opportunity to build the economy and develop the country. This belief represents a resource helping the country address some of the current problems confronting immigration, including reduced employment success of immigrants and evidence that racial divisions have significance particularly for certain groups. The belief in mass immigration as a positive resource and development opportunity underlies much of the positive discourse on immigration in Canada.

Notes

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5Jeffrey G. Reitz, ‘Pro-immigration Canada: social and economic roots of popular views’, IRPP Study, no. 20 (Montreal: Institute for Research on Public Policy October 2011).

6Alain Bélanger, and Eric Caron Malenfant, ‘Ethnocultural diversity in Canada: prospects for 2017’ (Statistics Canada Catalogue No. 11-008), Canadian Social Trends, winter 2005.

7Jeffrey G. Reitz, ‘Pro-immigration Canada: social and economic roots of popular views’.

8Peter M. Dungan, Morley Gunderson, and Tony Fang, ‘The macroeconomic impact of Canadian immigration: an empirical analysis using the FOCUS model’, Paper presented at the Citizenship and Immigration Canada Research Network meeting, Ottawa, 26 October 2010); George J. Borjas, Heaven's Door (Princeton: Princeton University Press 1999).

9Lesleyanne Hawthorne, ‘The impact of economic selection policy on labour market outcomes for degree-qualified migrants in Canada and Australia’, IRPP Choices, vol. 14, no. 5, May 2008, 1–47.

10Mark Cully, ‘Skilled migration selection policies: recent Australian reforms’, Migration Policy Practice, vol, 1, no. 1, October-November 2011, 4–7 (5).

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12Research and Evaluation Branch, Citizenship and Immigration Canada, Canada Facts and Figures: Immigration Overview. Permanent and Temporary Residents, 2010, 13.

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14Jeffrey G. Reitz, ‘Selecting immigrants for the short term: is it smart in the long run?’, Policy Options, July/August 2010, vol. 31, no.7, 12–16.

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21Margaret Young, ‘Immigration: the Canada-Quebec Accord’, Ottawa: Library of Parliament, Law and Government Division, 2004. http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/library/PRBpubs/bp252-e.htm.

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28Jeffrey G. Reitz, ‘Immigrant employment success in Canada, part II: understanding the decline’, Journal of International Migration and Integration, vol. 8, no. 1, 2007, 37–62.

29Roy McMurtry and Dr Alvin Curling, Review of The Roots of Youth Violence: Findings, Analysis and Conclusions, vol. 1 (Toronto: Queen's Printer for Ontario 2008).

30Stephen Lewis, Report to the Office of the Premier (Toronto: Government of Ontario 1992); Ratna Omidvar and Ted Richmond, ‘Immigrant settlement and social inclusion in Canada’, Perspectives on Social Inclusion, Laidlaw Foundation Working Paper Series (Toronto: Laidlaw Foundation 2003).

31Daniel Stoffman, Who Gets In: What's Wrong with Canada's Immigration Program—and How to Fix It (Toronto: Macfarlane, Walter and Ross 2002).

32Jeffrey G. Reitz and Rupa Banerjee, ‘Racial inequality, social cohesion, and policy issues in Canada’ in Keith Banting, Thomas Courchene and Leslie Seidle (eds), Belonging? Diversity, Recognition and Shared Citizenship in Canada: The Art of the State, vol. 3 (Montreal: Institute for Research on Public Policy 2007) 489-545.

33Jeffrey G. Reitz, Raymond Breton, Kenneth Dion and Karen Dion, Multiculturalism and Social Cohesion: Potentials and Challenges of Diversity (New York: Springer 2009).

34Robert Putnam, ‘E Pluribus Unum: diversity and community in the twenty-first century: the 2006 Johan Skytte Prize Lecture’, Scandinavian Political Studies, vol. 30, no. 2, 2007, 137-74.

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