An overview of discourses of skilled immigrants and “Canadian experience”: An English-language print media analysis. (original) (raw)

City of Toronto's Role in Immigration and Settlement

This report examines the role of the City of Toronto in immigration policy and settlement and integration programming. Toronto continues to be the most significant centre in Canada for newcomer settlement and a leading factor behind the rapid population growth of this global city (the fourth largest centre on in North America). Fully 35.9% of the total immigrant population in Canada call Toronto home and the city continues to be a powerful magnet for secondary migration. 46.1% of the city’s population, based on the 2016 Census, is made up foreign-born residents (Praznik and Shields, 2018, p. 4). Toronto is truly a ‘world a city’ (Anisef and Lanfphier, 2003) and is profoundly shaped by the impact of mass migration and the immigrant experience.

The Changing Labour Market Position of Canadian Immigrants

The Canadian Journal of Economics, 1995

Financial assistance provided by the University of Ottawa and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council is gratefully acknowledged. We thank Troy Joseph for his very capable research assistance and two anonymous referees for their comments.

The promise of migration : a companion to the International Metropolis Conference 2019, Ottawa, Canada

immigrant and settlement service sector, and private industries seeking to attract immigrant talent and acquire best practices related to diversity-as well as encouraging and supporting students in their pursuit of grassroots activism. These two core features of ISS-academic excellence and practical relevance-provide the context for The Promise of Migration. This compendium to the Conference is intended to promote students' work in the wider field of migration and, most importantly, to foster the participation of graduate students who bring their own perspective to the International Metropolis Conference in Canada. Students are tomorrow's leaders and their ideas and perspectives will shape the future of newcomer inclusion, economic opportunity harnessed from migration, and corresponding global cooperation. Ultimately, their ideas and perspectives will help migrants and societies to achieve the most from the promise of migration. All chapters were co-written by recent graduates of ISS (who are listed as first authors) and their faculty supervisors (second authors). The chapters are based on the students' Major Research Papers (MRPs). The instruction given to participating students and supervisors was to make the text accessible to a variety of audiences, including academics, policy makers, and civic leaders. The contributors were encouraged to discuss the policy relevance of their research, include policy recommendations, and avoid academic jargon. Readers who are interested in further details can access the full MRPs free of charge through Ryerson University, where we keep the remarkable collection of every MRP written by ISS graduates since 2005. The twelve chapters of this compendium are organized into four parts, each containing three chapters. Part 1 addresses issues related to the 'settlement sector,' which is a particularly Canadian term that refers to structures and organizations that deliver services to newcomers, ranging from immediate assistance at arrival and adapting in a new environment, to language training and career development. Part 2 deals with policy and innovative policy directions-in particular, in relation to settlement policies and immigrant selection programs in Canada. Part 3 focuses on identity and the roles of religion and practices of racialization on processes of 'integration.' Finally, Part 4 discusses international and transnational perspectives that link Canada to other parts of the world.

Joint Centre of Excellence for Research on Immigration and Settlement–Toronto

2006

ABSTRACT Especially in countries with high immigration, it is important to examine various indicators of the assimilation and integration of immigrants. Using Canada as an example, we examine the extent to which various immigrant groups take on the ethnic identity of their host country, thus displaying either an assimilated, integrated, or neither assimilated nor integrated ethnic identity. We pay particular attention to the impact of economic integration, years since migration, ethnic origin, and visible-minority status on ethnic identity.

Settlement and Integration Needs of Skilled Immigrants in Canada

Social Sciences

It is often believed that the settlement and integration of skilled immigrants is moderately easy in Canada, and that skilled immigrants do well in Canada after a brief adjustment period. However, numerous barriers prevent the effective integration of skilled immigrants in the mainstream society. Despite being famous for its Federal Skilled Worker Program, which includes the immigration of skilled workers through Express Entry, Canada shows disappointing results in the economic and social outcomes of the integration of skilled immigrants. This has socioeconomic implications for the immigrants and affects their health and wellbeing. Therefore, there is a need for all those who are involved with immigrant integration to explore and be conversant about the contexts and issues faced by skilled newcomers in Canada. In reviewing the academic and grey literature on the settlement and integration of skilled immigrants in Canada, this paper highlights the challenges faced by skilled immigrants in Canada and the needs experienced by them in facing these challenges. It provides an overview of the experiences and expectations of skilled immigrants related to their settlement and integration in Canada. This paper indicates a need to evaluate the availability of immigrant services focused on skilled immigrants and the effectiveness of the existing support offered to them by various government and non-government agencies.

The Changing Labor Market Position of Canadian Immigrants

1994

Financial assistance provided by the University of Ottawa and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council is gratefully acknowledged. We thank Troy Joseph for his very capable research assistance and two anonymous referees for their comments.

Being and Becoming " A New Immigrant " in Canada: How Language Matters, or Not

Based on a four-year ethnography and informed by poststructuralist theories of identity and language, this article examines how, through lived settlement experiences in Canada, a young man from Mainland China gradually became an immigrant in the folk sense of the term. Though he was considered a success in terms of the diaspora community, he was disempowered in the host society. Highlighting one vignette, I illustrate how he came to understand that language, in the form of various texts and everyday interactions, constitutes an important terrain upon which socioeconomic inequality and immigrant identity are negotiated, resisted but reproduced.