Canada is a peculiar nation. Peopled by immigrants, it is a country, paradoxically, which hates immigration. Every single public opinion survey over the past fifty years indicates that most Canadians – including by the way, most immigrants themselves – do not want any substantial increase in the number of people admitted to this country. This attitude may surprise Canadians, but historically it should not. It is one of our great national myths that Canada has a long history of welcoming refug..
the subsequent closure of the border, served to highlight Canada’s vulnerability to American nationa...
L’état de la Confédération canadienne suscite une certaine appréhension chez les observateurs averti...
Immigration has recently become a salient political issue in liberal democracies. Many political sci...
Many Canadians believe that immigrants steal jobs away from qualified Canadians, abuse the healthcar...
We use Canadian Election Studies surveys from 1988 to 2019 to investigate the evolution and determin...
Like Australia and the United States, Canada is usually considered a ‘traditional’ immigrant receivi...
This article examines the factors that lie behind Canada's success at earning the support of its new...
This thesis is a study of the current backlash against immigration and multiculturalism policies. T...
The forced migration of refugees from National Socialism brought to Canada a small but particularly ...
The incumbent Liberal Party of Canada (LPC) has set ambitious targets for the number of immigrants t...
Since the 1980s, Canada has accepted more immigrants and refugees for permanent settlement in propor...
When citizens lose faith in their government’s refugee policies, there arises the potential for an a...
To define Canada and the Canadian nation is no easy task. From a historical perspective, Canada is a...
The 2015 Canadian federal election campaign brought to the fore partisan cleavages in approaches to ...
Canada admits more than 220 000 immigrants every year and this is reflected in the statistic that 18...
the subsequent closure of the border, served to highlight Canada’s vulnerability to American nationa...
L’état de la Confédération canadienne suscite une certaine appréhension chez les observateurs averti...
Immigration has recently become a salient political issue in liberal democracies. Many political sci...
Many Canadians believe that immigrants steal jobs away from qualified Canadians, abuse the healthcar...
We use Canadian Election Studies surveys from 1988 to 2019 to investigate the evolution and determin...
Like Australia and the United States, Canada is usually considered a ‘traditional’ immigrant receivi...
This article examines the factors that lie behind Canada's success at earning the support of its new...
This thesis is a study of the current backlash against immigration and multiculturalism policies. T...
The forced migration of refugees from National Socialism brought to Canada a small but particularly ...
The incumbent Liberal Party of Canada (LPC) has set ambitious targets for the number of immigrants t...
Since the 1980s, Canada has accepted more immigrants and refugees for permanent settlement in propor...
When citizens lose faith in their government’s refugee policies, there arises the potential for an a...
To define Canada and the Canadian nation is no easy task. From a historical perspective, Canada is a...
The 2015 Canadian federal election campaign brought to the fore partisan cleavages in approaches to ...
Canada admits more than 220 000 immigrants every year and this is reflected in the statistic that 18...
the subsequent closure of the border, served to highlight Canada’s vulnerability to American nationa...
L’état de la Confédération canadienne suscite une certaine appréhension chez les observateurs averti...
Immigration has recently become a salient political issue in liberal democracies. Many political sci...