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Diversity in Canada. Almost 250,000 new immigrants and refugees arrive each year 2.2 million newcomers this past decade - highest inflow this centuryPrior to 1961, 90% European-borns -> 25% between 1981-1991 Of the 1.8 million immigrants who arrived between 1991-2001:58% from Asia (incl
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1. Transcending Diversity: Envisioning Shared Citizenship © Joanna Anneke Rummens
Culture, Community and Health StudiesFaculty of Medicine, University of Toronto
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto
anneke.rummens@utoronto.ca
2. Diversity in Canada Almost 250,000 new immigrants and refugees arrive each year
2.2 million newcomers this past decade - highest inflow this century
Prior to 1961, 90% European-borns -> 25% between 1981-1991
Of the 1.8 million immigrants who arrived between 1991-2001:
58% from Asia (includes the Middle East)
20% from Europe
11% from the Caribbean, Central and South America
8% from Africa
3% from the United States
18.4% of the population is foreign-born, the highest level in 70 years
3.
18% of Canadians speak neither English or French as a first language
Increasing proportion of newcomers speak a non-official language at home
73% of immigrants between 1991-2001 members of visible minority groups
Canadas visible minority population will likely account for 1/5 of the total population by 2016
249 different ethno-cultural origins indicated in 2001 Census results
38% of the population reported multiple ethnic origins in 2001
(2001 Canadian Census)
4. Traditional view of Canadian society - Three Forces:
two founding charter groups - English and French
the ethnics - comprised of subsequent immigrant populations
aboriginal and First Nations peoples
Official policy of bilingualism within a multicultural framework
also actual existence of nations within nations
5. Seeking Unity within Diversity Canadas Multiculturalism Policy encourages
strong identification of Canadians with their
ancestral ethnic group origins
at the same time, identification with Canadian society
Both are seen as vital to social cohesion
6.
This apparent contradiction
gives rise to
a number of
important issues
7. First, is multiculturalism - sociocultural pluralism as opposed to political pluralism - compatible with national unity?