Abstract Background 'Evidence-based policy making' for immigrants is a complicated undertaking. In striving toward this goal, federal Canadian partners created the Metropolis Project in 1995 to optimize a two-way transfer of knowledge (researchers – policy makers) within five Canadian Centres of Excellence focused on migrants newly arrived in Canada. Most recently, Metropolis federal partners, including the Public Health Agency of Canada, defined one of six research priority areas as, immigrant 'families, children, and youth'. In order to build on previous work in the partnership, we sought to determine what has been studied within this research-policy partnership about immigrant 'families, children, and youth' since its inception. Methods ...
This Master’s thesis examines the history of Canadian immigration policies from the beginning of the...
The Migrant Mothers Project (MMP) was launched in 2011, as a collaborative research project led by R...
While a fairly large body of empirical research and policy documents exists on immigrant integration...
The past 25 years has seen a more or less continuous deterioration in the economic outcomes for immi...
Canada is an immigrant-receiving nation and many graduate students in nursing and other disciplines ...
The existing research on refugees, TFWs, and international students looks at their experiences and c...
The article is a brief review of foreign literature that examines various aspects of Canadas demogra...
The aim of this paper is to examine government–university–community partnerships...
This research endeavour attempts a critical appraisal of the scope and substance of Canada's immigra...
In the larger context of migration, the education and integration of immigrant children within Canad...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study was initiated to identify a process by which a po...
Given the rise and diversification of the immigrant student population within Canadian school system...
As a strategy for addressing the issues of aging population and economic development, the Canadian g...
Canada admits between more than 200,000 immigrants every year. National policy emphasizes rigorous s...
This article describes the results of a qualitative investigation completed for Citizenship and Immi...
This Master’s thesis examines the history of Canadian immigration policies from the beginning of the...
The Migrant Mothers Project (MMP) was launched in 2011, as a collaborative research project led by R...
While a fairly large body of empirical research and policy documents exists on immigrant integration...
The past 25 years has seen a more or less continuous deterioration in the economic outcomes for immi...
Canada is an immigrant-receiving nation and many graduate students in nursing and other disciplines ...
The existing research on refugees, TFWs, and international students looks at their experiences and c...
The article is a brief review of foreign literature that examines various aspects of Canadas demogra...
The aim of this paper is to examine government–university–community partnerships...
This research endeavour attempts a critical appraisal of the scope and substance of Canada's immigra...
In the larger context of migration, the education and integration of immigrant children within Canad...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study was initiated to identify a process by which a po...
Given the rise and diversification of the immigrant student population within Canadian school system...
As a strategy for addressing the issues of aging population and economic development, the Canadian g...
Canada admits between more than 200,000 immigrants every year. National policy emphasizes rigorous s...
This article describes the results of a qualitative investigation completed for Citizenship and Immi...
This Master’s thesis examines the history of Canadian immigration policies from the beginning of the...
The Migrant Mothers Project (MMP) was launched in 2011, as a collaborative research project led by R...
While a fairly large body of empirical research and policy documents exists on immigrant integration...