50 results on '"immigrant settlement"'
Search Results
2. Ethnoburb as a spatiotemporal process: its implications for immigrant settlements.
- Author
-
Harun, Rafael and Filion, Pierre
- Abstract
The paper complements the visual observation and ethnographic emphasis of much of the literature on ethnoburbs by offering a spatial analysis of suburban immigrant settlements. The research focuses on the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area (GTHA), Canada's most populous urban region. The region is especially well suited to an investigation of the suburban distribution of immigrants because of its exceptionally large and diversified influx of immigrants. The study concentrates on the two largest recent GTHA immigrant groups, Chinese and South Asians, and assesses their spatial evolution between 2006 and 2016. It demonstrates that immigrant suburban spatial patterning can take different spatial forms according to the ethnic groups under consideration—clustering in the case of the Chinese and a blending of clustering and dispersion for the South Asians. It also shows that ethnoburbs come in different guises reflecting the size and composition of different ethnic groups. Another finding concerns the evolution of ethnoburbs. The paper identifies different ethnoburb growth trajectories, but also acknowledges the possibility of a reduced presence of ethnoburbs in the future. Finally, by drawing findings from prior research on ethnoburbs, it elaborates on the gravity effect exerted by large clusters of ethnic retailing, services, and institutions on the different settlements of a given ethnic group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Exploring Mexican Immigrant Settlement in the Suburbs of Vancouver.
- Author
-
López Salinas, Anabel and Teixeira, Carlos
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *SUBURBS , *HOUSING , *RACISM , *LANDSCAPES , *EMPLOYMENT , *CITIES & towns , *IMMIGRANTS , *HOUSE buying , *SUBURBANIZATION - Abstract
In the current age of migration, suburbs in many Canadian cities are becoming important ports of entry for new immigrants from around the world. This has led to a growth in cultural, ethnic, and racial diversity in the suburbs reflecting global migration patterns. In Vancouver, Canada, the growing “suburbanization” of immigrants is shaping social, cultural, economic, and political landscapes in these areas. Through interviews with 60 key informants, we explore the settlement of Mexican immigrants in Burnaby, Surrey, and Abbotsford, fast-growing Canadian communities, and popular destinations for Mexican immigrants. The findings reveal that Mexican immigrants living in the suburbs of Vancouver face numerous barriers, including lack of access to affordable housing to rent or buy, lack of information on settlement services, and difficulty securing acceptable employment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Immigration, settlement process and mental health challenges of immigrants/ refugees: Alternative care thinking
- Author
-
Margareth Santos Zanchetta, Abinet Gebremariam, David Aftab Ansari, Elizabeth Huang, Stéphanie Larchanché, Clément Picot-Ngo, Marguerite Cognet, and Shone John
- Subjects
immigrant health ,immigrant settlement ,international collaboration ,mental health ,refugee health ,Nursing ,RT1-120 - Abstract
This paper discusses progressive thinking and clinical views on improving mental health practice for immigrants and refugees. It addresses policy, care delivery, professionals’ attitudes, and immigrants’ access to mental health care — all factors especially pertinent for practice in major immigration hubs. The data was gathered from invited presentations and discussions among participants at an international multidisciplinary symposium, including health and social scientists from Toronto (Canada) and Paris (France), major urban centres attracting large numbers of immigrant and refugees who constantly encounter challenges for their successful settlement. The focus is on alternative care thinking and innovative approaches for better care and understanding of these populations’ health behavior. Recommendations on how to advance knowledge relevant for these two urban hubs of immigration were documented, underpinned by the consensus that economic disparities, societal and political forces, as well as cultural and linguistic factors, influence immigrants’ and refugees’ vulnerability regarding mental health stability.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Immigration, settlement process and mental health challenges of immigrants/refugees: Alternative care thinking.
- Author
-
SANTOS ZANCHETTA, MARGARETH, GEBREMARIAM, ABINET, AFTAB ANSARI, DAVID, HUANG, ELIZABETH, LARCHANCHÉ, STÉPHANIE, PICOT-NGO, CLÉMENT, COGNET, MARGUERITE, and JOHN, SHONE
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,HEALTH services accessibility ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,MENTAL health ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
This paper discusses progressive thinking and clinical views on improving mental health practice for immigrants and refugees. It addresses policy, care delivery, professionals' attitudes, and immigrants' access to mental health care -- all factors especially pertinent for practice in major immigration hubs. The data was gathered from invited presentations and discussions among participants at an international multidisciplinary symposium, including health and social scientists from Toronto (Canada) and Paris (France), major urban centres attracting large numbers of immigrant and refugees who constantly encounter challenges for their successful settlement. The focus is on alternative care thinking and innovative approaches for better care and understanding of these populations' health behavior. Recommendations on how to advance knowledge relevant for these two urban hubs of immigration were documented, underpinned by the consensus that economic disparities, societal and political forces, as well as cultural and linguistic factors, influence immigrants' and refugees' vulnerability regarding mental health stability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Moving: Patterns of Immigrant Settlement and Spatial Mobility
- Author
-
Rumbaut, Rubén G
- Subjects
Immigration ,immigrant settlement ,spatial mobility ,pioneers ,chain migration ,new destinations ,dispersal ,ethnic concentration ,recruitment ,labor migrants ,professional migrants ,entrepreneurial migrants ,refugees and exiles ,urbanization ,persistent ethnicity - Published
- 2014
7. Moving Patterns of Immigrant Settlement and Spatial Mobility
- Author
-
Portes, Alejandro and Rumbaut, Ruben G
- Subjects
Immigration ,immigrant settlement ,spatial mobility ,pioneers ,chain migration ,new destinations ,dispersal ,ethnic concentration ,recruitment ,labor migrants ,professional migrants ,entrepreneurial migrants ,refugees and exiles ,urbanization ,persistent ethnicity - Published
- 2014
8. The Negotiation of Space and Rights: Suburban Planning with Diversity
- Author
-
Zhixi Cecilia Zhuang
- Subjects
canada ,diversity ,ethnic suburbs ,immigrant settlement ,institutional completeness ,social infrastructure ,social space ,toronto ,City planning ,HT165.5-169.9 - Abstract
The increasing suburbanization of immigrant settlement in Canada’s major receiving cities has created unprecedented challenges for municipalities. Despite emerging research about the rise of ethnic suburbs in Canada and abroad, the role of suburban municipalities in facilitating immigrant integration and planning with diversity remains unclear. Based on mixed-method ethnographic research, this article investigates how immigrant and racialized communities in the Greater Toronto Area have significantly transformed suburban places and built institutionally complete communities. However, the rapid development of these spaces has not been fully recognized or supported by municipal planning authorities. Conflicts related to land use, public engagement, and public realm development expose planning’s failure to keep pace with the diverse needs of immigrant communities, who must continually negotiate and fight for their use of space. Furthermore, the lack of effective civic engagement not only ignores immigrant and racialized communities as important stakeholders in suburban redevelopment, but also threatens to destroy the social infrastructure built by these communities and their ‘informal’ practices that are often not recognized by the planning ‘norm.’ Without appropriate community consultation, planning processes can further sideline marginalized groups. Lack of consultation also tends to prevent cooperation between groups, impeding the building of inclusive communities. It is imperative for municipalities to better understand and encourage community engagement and placemaking in ethnic suburbs. This study offers several recommendations for suburban planning with diversity.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Welcoming and Inclusive Communities and Workplaces Program (WICWP): The Case in Thompson-Nicola Region, British Columbia
- Author
-
Drolet, Julie L., Tibe Bonifacio, Glenda, editor, and Drolet, Julie L., editor
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Encountering Everyday Racist Practices: Sociospatial Negotiations of Immigrant Settlement in Athens, Greece.
- Author
-
Papatzani, Eva (Evangelia)
- Subjects
SOCIAL conditions of immigrants ,PUBLIC spaces ,RACE discrimination ,SQUATTER settlements ,URBANIZATION - Abstract
This article delineates the ways in which the context of institutional and non‐institutional racist practices, legitimated by the rise of extreme right‐wing populism and racism, affects immigrants' everyday lives in Athens, Greece. In this research, I explored the transformations of immigrants' settlement trajectories, coping strategies and tactics, and their bodily interactions when encountering racist violence at the local level, through extensive fieldwork in two case study areas in metropolitan Athens—Omonia and Nikaia. The article is based on previous work on encounters with difference and everyday racism, with the aim of contributing to existing scholarship by examining urban encounters with manifestations of racism in the form of violent practices, which are on a rise not only as exceptional but also as everyday lived events. I demonstrate how immigrants' encounters with police raids and patrols, and with racist violence perpetrated by neo‐Nazi militias, transform immigrants' daily lives in the city at the micro‐scale. These encounters have an impact not only on immigrants' social relationships, strategies and tactics of settlement, but also on the reconstruction of urban space. My argument is that urban encounter remains an open and dynamic field for negotiation of interethnic cohabitation, as it produces both violent confrontations and sociospatial embodied opportunities for coexistence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Faith and Settlement Partnerships: Perspectives of Community Stakeholders.
- Author
-
Janzen, Rich, Brnjas, Chris, Cresswell, Jim, and Chapman, Mark
- Subjects
- *
FAITH , *COMMUNITIES , *STAKEHOLDERS , *COMMUNITY-based participatory research , *SQUATTER settlements - Abstract
This article explores partnerships between faith groups and government-funded immigrant settlement services. It does so by reporting on perspectives of community stakeholders through a survey across four communities in Ontario, Canada. Survey results demonstrate that the existence, benefits, and challenges of faith and settlement partnerships are recognized by settlement workers, faith leaders, and other stakeholders. Yet the results also indicate that more could be done to strengthen partnerships so that they lead to better settlement outcomes. The article discusses five key actions for strengthening partnerships: sharing stories, exploring differences, enabling a cultural shift, conducting advocacy, and formalizing partnerships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Immigration and Crime in Canadian Cities: A 35-Year Study.
- Author
-
Jung, Maria
- Subjects
- *
CRIME , *CRIME statistics , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *METROPOLITAN areas , *DEMOGRAPHIC change , *CENSUS - Abstract
This study examines whether changes in immigration are associated with changes in crime rates in Canadian census metropolitan areas for the period 1976–2011. Using data from the Uniform Crime Reports and the Canadian census, this study employs fixed effects regression models to analyse the changes in immigration and crime rates during this 35-year period. Controlling for changes in demographic and socio-economic co-variates, overall changes in the proportion of the population that is foreign-born are either not significantly associated or negatively associated with changes in crime rates within Canadian cities. Overall, this article adds to the literature by using a longitudinal design within a Canadian urban context, employing multiple measures of immigration, and extending the analysis beyond one type of crime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Identifying and Analyzing the Spatial Pattern of Foreign Immigrant Settlement in the Rural and Urban Environment of Iran.
- Author
-
Zaki, Yashar, Ahmadi, Seyyed Abbas, Shavazi, Mohammad Jalal Abbasi, and Adibnia, Zahra
- Subjects
URBAN ecology (Sociology) ,CITIES & towns ,VILLAGES ,DEMOGRAPHIC surveys ,RURAL geography ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,RURAL-urban relations - Abstract
During the past 40 years, Iran has faced vast important demographic changes. Even though Iran has not experienced permanent stability after the Islamic revolution and constantly has dealt with matters such as war, threats, and sanctions, it has been homeward for refugees from neighboring and non-neighboring countries. These refugees originated from Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan. Except for these three major groups, there are some immigrants from Turkey, Turkmenistan, Armenia, etc. that inhabit in rural and urban settlements in Iran. Moran's I statistic has been applied to determine the spatial pattern of location selection and local visualization of the pattern, Getis-Ord Gi* statistic employed. The results express that in both rural and urban areas, the aliens' location selection pattern is shifting from concentration to dispread. Furthermore, 33 zones in the hotspot have been found in the local survey of the population composition index, for rural areas. We have also observed 54 zones in the hotspot for urban areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The Ephrata Community in the Atlantic World
- Author
-
Bach, Jeff, Gribben, Crawford, Series editor, Spurlock, Scott, Series editor, and Lockley, Philip, editor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Changing Practices and Shifting Perceptions: Chinese Immigrants 'Integrating' into the Engineering Profession in Canada
- Author
-
Shan, Hongxia, Cao, Huhua, editor, and Paltiel, Jeremy, editor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Immigration and Federalism: Responsibility for Immigration in the Light of the Literature on Federalism
- Author
-
Vineberg, Robert, Baglay, Sasha, editor, and Nakache, Delphine, editor
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. "Canadian Experience" discourse and anti-racialism in a "post-racial" society.
- Author
-
Ku, Jane, Bhuyan, Rupaleem, Sakamoto, Izumi, Jeyapal, Daphne, and Fang, Lin
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *FOREIGN workers , *POSTRACIALISM , *LABOR market , *RACISM , *EMPLOYMENT ,CANADIAN economy, 1991- - Abstract
"Canadian Experience" is a paradox for many immigrants in Canada and contributes to their exclusion from the labour market. Through an analysis of Canadian English print media, from 2006 to 2011, we illustrate how "Canadian Experience" discourse places the responsibility of immigrant labour market integration on immigrants themselves and constructs their experiences of exclusion as non-racial. This is theorized as a "post-racial" strategy that relies on anti-racialism (avoidance of racial references) to deny the existence and effects of racism, thereby allowing the Canadian public to maintain its façade of innocence but perpetuates "racism without racists". The discourse de-historicizes postcolonial racial hierarchy and promotes a de-racialized neo-liberal model for immigrant inclusion. This has implications for anti-racism and settlement service provision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. ‘Are You Thinking What We’re Thinking?’: Class, Immigration and Belonging
- Author
-
Biressi, Anita, Nunn, Heather, Biressi, Anita, and Nunn, Heather
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Summary and Conclusion
- Author
-
Vineberg, Robert and Vineberg, Robert
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Role of Multicultural Media in Connecting Municipal Governments with Ethnocultural Communities: The Case of Ottawa
- Author
-
Luisa Veronis and Rukhsana Ahmed
- Subjects
Ethnocultural and Immigrant Communities ,Immigrant Integration ,Immigrant Settlement ,Multicultural Media ,Multicultural Media Producers ,Municipal Government ,Communication. Mass media ,P87-96 ,Sociology (General) ,HM401-1281 - Abstract
This paper aims to advance understanding of the role ethnic and multicultural media can play in connecting municipal governments and Ethnocultural and Immigrant Communities (EICs). Using an innovative mixed-methods approach and methodological triangulation, we compare the access to and use of multicultural media among four EICs—the Chinese, Latin American, Somali and South Asian—in Ottawa, Canada. Our cross-comparative study yields three main findings: 1) members of participating communities proactively and strategically use a variety of sources to access information about local services; 2) noteworthy differences exist in the access to and use of different types of media both across and within the four EICs, due to demographic and cultural differences; and 3) participants shared challenges and opportunities that multicultural media afford to better connect municipal government and EICs. The paper’s findings make important empirical contributions to the literature on the integrative potential of ethnic and multicultural media by strengthening the reliability of data, validity of findings, and broadening and deepening understanding the role multicultural media play in promoting collaboration between city governments and diverse EICs.
- Published
- 2015
21. The Role of Multicultural Media in Connecting Municipal Governments with Ethnocultural and Immigrant Communities: The Case of Ottawa
- Author
-
Luisa Veronis and Rukhsana Ahmed
- Subjects
Ethnocultural and Immigrant Communities ,Immigrant Integration ,Immigrant Settlement ,Multicultural Media ,Multicultural Media Producers ,Municipal Government ,Communication. Mass media ,P87-96 ,Sociology (General) ,HM401-1281 - Abstract
This paper aims to advance understanding of the role ethnic and multicultural media can play in connecting municipal governments and Ethnocultural and Immigrant Communities (EICs). Using an innovative mixed-methods approach and methodological triangulation, we compare the access to and use of multicultural media among four EICs—the Chinese, Latin American, Somali, and South Asian—in Ottawa, Canada. Our cross-comparative study yields three main findings: 1) members of participating communities proactively and strategically use a variety of sources to access information about local services; 2) noteworthy differences exist in the access to and use of different types of media both across and within the four EICs, due to demographic and cultural differences; and 3) participants shared challenges and opportunities that multicultural media afford to better connect municipal government and EICs. The paper’s findings make important empirical contributions to the literature on the integrative potential of ethnic and multicultural media by strengthening the reliability of data, validity of findings, and broadening and deepening understanding the role multicultural media play in promoting collaboration between city governments and diverse EICs.
- Published
- 2015
22. Public Libraries Serving Immigrant Communities in Canada.
- Author
-
Mabi, Millicent
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC libraries , *ABORIGINAL Canadians , *COMMUNITIES , *VOLUNTEER service - Abstract
International immigration has taken a prominent position on the global agenda as record numbers of people move across international borders. As the seventh most popular destination among immigrants, Canada has continued to receive a large share of immigrants, and Canadian institutions are poised to help resettle them. This article explores a segment of those institutions—namely, public libraries. The article presents various tactics employed by public libraries to serve their immigrant populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Integrating an Immigrant Metropolis: Vancouver’s Diversity Mission
- Author
-
Sandercock, Leonie, Brock, Samara, Sandercock, Leonie, and Attili, Giovanni
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Immigration, settlement process and mental health challenges of immigrants/ refugees: Alternative care thinking
- Author
-
Marguerite Cognet, Shone John, Stéphanie Larchanche, Margareth Santos Zanchetta, David A. Ansari, Clément Picot-Ngo, Elizabeth Huang, and Abinet Gebreegziabher Gebremariam
- Subjects
Economic growth ,Process (engineering) ,Refugee ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,RT1-120 ,Nursing ,General Medicine ,Mental health ,refugee health ,Political science ,international collaboration ,Alternative care ,Settlement (litigation) ,immigrant health ,mental health ,immigrant settlement ,media_common - Abstract
This paper discusses progressive thinking and clinical views on improving mental health practice for immigrants and refugees. It addresses policy, care delivery, professionals’ attitudes, and immigrants’ access to mental health care — all factors especially pertinent for practice in major immigration hubs. The data was gathered from invited presentations and discussions among participants at an international multidisciplinary symposium, including health and social scientists from Toronto (Canada) and Paris (France), major urban centres attracting large numbers of immigrant and refugees who constantly encounter challenges for their successful settlement. The focus is on alternative care thinking and innovative approaches for better care and understanding of these populations’ health behavior. Recommendations on how to advance knowledge relevant for these two urban hubs of immigration were documented, underpinned by the consensus that economic disparities, societal and political forces, as well as cultural and linguistic factors, influence immigrants’ and refugees’ vulnerability regarding mental health stability.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Implementing Policies - Disseminating Instructions
- Author
-
Kalekin-Fishman, Devorah
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Haitian Immigrants in the United States : The Imagining of where ‘Home’ is in Their Transnational Social Fields
- Author
-
Fouron, Georges E., Yeoh, Brenda S. A., editor, Charney, Michael W., editor, and Kiong, Tong Chee, editor
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Constitutional Issues and Settlement in Québec
- Author
-
Vineberg, Robert and Vineberg, Robert
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Multicultural Media Use and Immigrant Settlement: A Comparative Study of Four Communities in Ottawa, Canada.
- Author
-
Ahmed, Rukhsana and Veronis, Luisa
- Subjects
MULTICULTURALISM ,IMMIGRANTS ,DIGITAL media ,INCOME ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Multicultural media serve as important sources of information for immigrant settlement. However, little is known about the role of multicultural media in the process of immigrant settlement. Our aim was to address this gap and to advance understanding of multicultural media use and immigrant settlement through a detailed empirical study involving four ethnocultural and immigrant communities (EICs)-the Chinese, Spanish-speaking Latin American, Somali, and South Asian-in Ottawa, Canada. Using a conceptual framework combining notions of immigrant contexts of reception, and immigrant settlement and information seeking, we present and analyze the findings of a large survey data set ( N = 1212) comparing types of multicultural print, broadcast, and digital media use by immigration category, length of stay, and yearly household income. Based on our findings, we argue that variations exist in the use of multicultural media both within and across the four participating EICs; while factors such as availability of multicultural media as well as length of stay in Canada and, to some extent, household income play a role, immigration category is less significant. Furthermore, we advance that although EICs do use various types of multicultural media, they tend to favor digital media. These findings contribute to improved understanding of the role of multicultural media use in the everyday lives of EICs and provide directions for future research and for the development of relevant policies and practices to address immigrant information needs and facilitate their settlement process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Christian Churches and Immigrant Support in Canada: An Organizational Ecology Perspective.
- Author
-
Reimer, Sam, Chapman, Mark, Janzen, Rich, Watson, James, and Wilkinson, Michael
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,SERVICES for immigrants ,CHRISTIANS ,ORGANIZATIONAL ecology ,SOCIAL support ,CHURCH work - Abstract
Canada receives roughly 250,000 immigrants each year, and the government spends considerable resources on assisting them to settle and integrate into Canadian society through the agencies they support. Most of these new immigrants settle in Canada's largest cities, where churches meet specific needs that extend beyond the capacities of government agencies. In smaller centers, churches cover a wide range of services because few government supports are available. Little is known about the work of churches in Canada in spite of their importance to immigrant settlement and integration. In this study, we examine the services offered to immigrants by Canadian Christian churches. We show how the service provision of Christian churches is constrained by other organizations and groups in their environment, in ways consonant with the organizational ecology framework. Specifically, churches service the needs of immigrants by adapting to specific niche needs and by filling in gaps left by other service providers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Spatial assimilation? The development in immigrants' residential career with duration of stay in Denmark.
- Author
-
Andersen, Hans
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,SEGREGATION ,RESIDENTIAL areas ,RESIDENTS ,HOUSING - Abstract
Many studies have shown that immigrants' residential situation differs from that of natives and that factors other than housing needs and financial situation influence immigrants' options and choices concerning housing and neighbourhood. Research has indicated that immigrants might have a stronger preference for renting due to insecurity about their future situation and that especially newly arrived immigrants tend to live in immigrant-dense, so-called multi-ethnic, neighbourhoods. However, the spatial assimilation theory claims that in the course of time immigrants will move to other kinds of housing and neighbourhoods. In this paper, the residential careers of immigrants in the first years after their arrival are examined and compared with Danes. The hypothesis tested is that over time the housing situation of immigrants gets closer to the comparable one for Danes. It is a longitudinal study based on data from 1985 to 2008 on non-Western immigrants in Denmark. The results show that non-Western immigrants steadily increased their presence in social housing and multi-ethnic neighbourhoods during their first 10 years of stay; then, their presence stagnates; and after 15 years, it declines. Part of the initial increase in the frequency of living in multi-ethnic neighbourhoods was not due to individual choices among immigrants but could be ascribed to the increasing number of multi-ethnic neighbourhoods over time. The study confirms spatial assimilation, also when controlling for degree of economic integration, but the change was not dramatic over the 24 years covered by the study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The Private Sector, Institutions of Higher Education, and Immigrant Settlement in Canada.
- Author
-
Flynn, Emma and Bauder, Harald
- Subjects
ASSISTED emigration ,PRIVATE sector ,HIGHER education ,IMMIGRANTS ,NEOLIBERALISM ,PRIVATIZATION ,EDUCATION ,EMPLOYMENT ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
The settlement sector in Canada has undergone significant transformations in recent times, most notably the imposition of neoliberal principles on service providers that has transferred a substantial amount of the immigrant selection and recruitment process from governmental agencies to third parties. This trend of devolution has accelerated with recent developments associated with Provincial Nominee Programs. By reviewing the literature related to Provincial Nominee Programs and their implementation, we illustrate how private employers and institutions of higher education are not only involved in immigrant selection but also increasingly in settlement service delivery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Role of Multicultural Media in Connecting Municipal Governments with Ethnocultural Communities: The Case of Ottawa.
- Author
-
Veronis, Luisa and Ahmed, Rukhsana
- Subjects
MULTICULTURALISM ,ETHNIC groups & politics ,MUNICIPAL government ,ELECTIONS in mass media ,POLITICAL participation ,OTTAWA (North American people) - Abstract
Copyright of Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition is the property of Global Media Journal: Canadian Edition and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2015
33. Formation of immigrant neighbourhoods in Sweden: A case-study of Rinkeby, Stockholm
- Author
-
Egorova, T. D., Ivanova, N. S., Varshaver, E. A., Egorova, T. D., Ivanova, N. S., and Varshaver, E. A.
- Abstract
The article describes the pattern of the formation of immigrant neighbourhoods in Sweden based on the neighbourhood of Rinkeby in Stockholm as an example. The research involves an analysis of related published studies and empirical data, which made it possible to analyse the urban history of Stockholm and synthesise the causes, premises and the timeline of Rinkeby’s development, including the Million Homes Programme and the consequences of the state housing policies on the neighbourhood. The article considers the infrastructural features of the neighbourhood nowadays, including the immigrant-oriented facilities and institutions and the prevalence of non-profit municipal rental housing, as well as the demographic characteristics of its inhabitants, including the classification of the population by the time of settlement in the neighbourhood. Finally, the article explores possible reasons for Swedes to avoid settlement in Rinkeby, such as low prestige, high percentage of immigrants in the population, high crime rate etc., as well as possible causes for further attractiveness of Rinkeby for immigrants, including shorter housing queues, immigrant infrastructure and culture in the neighbourhood. © Siberian Federal University. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2020
34. The Impact of Corporations on the Settlement of Migrant Workers: Koreans in Alabama, USA.
- Author
-
Kim, Eunbi
- Subjects
- *
KOREANS , *IMMIGRANTS , *SKILLED labor , *INTERNATIONAL business enterprises , *AMERICANIZATION , *EMPLOYMENT , *SERVICES for immigrants , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
In this article, I examine how the short-term and long-term settlement patterns of South Korean migrant workers differ by their migration mechanisms: corporate driven or individual driven. Using 42 in-depth interviews conducted in Alabama in the USA from June 2012 to January 2014, I find that the migrants have different experiences throughout their settlement depending on their corporate contexts of migration. The findings suggest that corporate-driven migrants have a better set-up in the first place due to organisational assistance while individual-driven migrants are more susceptible to various problems. Such disparities continue to have impacts on the migrants' life trajectories in the long run. This indicates that to what extent the employers are involved in the migration and settlement processes and the way in which they treat the workers can create inequalities among migrant workers. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Predictors of immigrant children's mental health in Canada: selection, settlement contingencies, culture, or all of the above?
- Author
-
Beiser, Morton, Goodwill, Alasdair, Albanese, Patrizia, McShane, Kelly, and Nowakowski, Matilda
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *CHILD psychology , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *EMOTIONAL problems of children , *CULTURE , *LAND settlement , *SOMATIZATION disorder , *HEALTH - Abstract
Background and study aims: A previous publication from the New Canadian Children and Youth Study, a national study of immigrant children and youth in Canada, showed a gradient of levels of emotional distress with children from Hong Kong (HK) at the most severe end, Filipino children at the least severe, and children from the People's Republic of China (PRC) in between. Based on the premise that country of origin can be regarded as an index for differing immigration trajectories, the current study examines the extent to which arrival characteristics, resettlement contingencies and cultural factors account for country of origin variations in immigrant children's mental health. Arrival characteristics included child's age at arrival, parental education, parental fluency in English or French, and assistance from family at arrival. Resettlement contingencies included parental mental health, intra-familial conflict, settlement stress, separations from parents and child's age when mother started working outside the home. Cultural factors included one-child family composition and parenting styles. Methods: A national survey of 2,031 families with at least one child between the ages of 4 and 6 or 11 and 13 from HK, the PRC and the Philippines was conducted with the Person Most Knowledgeable (PMK) in snowball-generated samples in 6 different cities across Canada. Predictors of the dependent variable, emotional problems (EP), were examined in a hierarchical block regression analysis. EP was regressed on ethnic and country of origin group in model 1; arrival characteristics were added in model 2; resettlement contingencies in model 3 and cultural factors in model 4. Results: The final set of predictor variables accounted for 19.3 % of the variance in EP scores among the younger cohort and 23.2 % in the older. Parental human and social capital variables accounted for only a small amount of the overall variance in EP, but there were statistically significant inverse relationships between EP and PMK fluency in English or French. Settlement contingencies accounted for a significant increase in the explanatory power of the regression equation, net of the effects of country of origin and selection characteristics. This block of variables also accounted for the Filipino mental health advantage. Levels of parent's depression and somatization, harsh parenting, intrafamilial conflict, and resettlement stress each varied directly with levels of children's EP. Cultural variables made a significant contribution to explaining the variance in EP scores. Harsh parenting was significantly associated with increased levels of EP in both age groups, and supportive parenting was a mental health protective factor for younger children. Conclusions: Immigrant family human and social capital, according to which immigrants are selected for admission to Canada, play a relatively small role in determining children's mental health. These effects are overshadowed by resettlement contingencies and cultural influences. Concentrating on trying to find a formula to select the 'right' immigrants while neglecting settlement and culture is likely to pay limited dividends for ensuring the mental health of children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Формирование районов резидентной концентрации иммигрантов в Швеции: кейс-стади района Стокгольма Ринкебю
- Author
-
Nataliya Ivanova, Tatiana Egorova, and Evgeni Varshaver
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,MIGRATION ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Prestige ,Immigration ,Population ,Urban studies ,Timeline ,IMMIGRANT SETTLEMENT ,RINKEBY ,Urban history ,Geography ,IMMIGRANT NEIGHBOURHOOD ,Anthropology ,SWEDEN ,Demographic economics ,“LITTLE MOGADISHU” ,IMMIGRANT INTEGRATION ,URBAN STUDIES ,Settlement (litigation) ,education ,Neighbourhood (mathematics) ,media_common - Abstract
The article describes the pattern of the formation of immigrant neighbourhoods in Sweden based on the neighbourhood of Rinkeby in Stockholm as an example. The research involves an analysis of related published studies and empirical data, which made it possible to analyse the urban history of Stockholm and synthesise the causes, premises and the timeline of Rinkeby’s development, including the Million Homes Programme and the consequences of the state housing policies on the neighbourhood. The article considers the infrastructural features of the neighbourhood nowadays, including the immigrant-oriented facilities and institutions and the prevalence of non-profit municipal rental housing, as well as the demographic characteristics of its inhabitants, including the classification of the population by the time of settlement in the neighbourhood. Finally, the article explores possible reasons for Swedes to avoid settlement in Rinkeby, such as low prestige, high percentage of immigrants in the population, high crime rate etc., as well as possible causes for further attractiveness of Rinkeby for immigrants, including shorter housing queues, immigrant infrastructure and culture in the neighbourhood. © Siberian Federal University. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2020
37. Social inclusion through multilingual ideologies, policies and practices: a case study of a minority church.
- Author
-
Han, Huamei
- Subjects
- *
CASE studies , *SOCIAL integration , *MULTILINGUALISM , *LINGUISTIC minorities , *MONOLINGUALISM , *CHURCH work with immigrants - Abstract
Adopting a materialist and processual approach to language and specifically multilingualism, this paper explores what language ideologies a minority, non-educational institution embraced and how this facilitated social inclusion through constructing institutional multilingualism within societal monolingualism. Specifically, I document how a Chinese church in English-dominant Canada developed institutional multilingualism over time by adopting multiple languages institutionally, allowing code-switching in various events, and assigning speaking roles based on identities beyond linguistic performance. Examining the socioeconomic conditions that made multilingual ideologies, policies and practices commonsense at that church, I discuss the implementational and ideological spaces that may be opened up, as well as the challenges they presented for individuals and institutions. In order to further the social inclusion agenda, I argue for making the materialist and processual view of multilingualism more accessible and operational to the general public, and particularly to educational practitioners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. 'Love your China' and evangelise: religion, nationalism, racism and immigrant settlement in Canada.
- Author
-
Han, Huamei
- Subjects
NATIONALISM ,RELIGION ,RACISM ,IMMIGRANTS ,CRITICAL race theory ,ETHNOLOGY ,CHRISTIANITY - Abstract
This paper explores how race, religion and national origin intersect in one transnational context. In an educational ethnography, I encountered a discourse that called for overseas Chinese to convert and evangelise other Chinese (in China), which won many followers in Canada. Using Critical Race Theory and the notion of intersectionality, I analyse the shared understandings of race and national identity, and the shared experience of institutionalised discrimination in everyday life in this community. I suggest that sanctioned and enabled by Canadian banal nationalism and racism, structural discrimination against racialised minority immigrants contributes to difficulties they experience in settlement. Intersecting with racism and banal nationalism, Christian evangelism offers many Chinese immigrants an alternative frame to understand the meaning and purpose of immigration and of living as racialised immigrants. Implications for immigrant settlement and for education in general are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. GENTRIFICATION, SOCIAL MIX, AND SOCIAL POLARIZATION: TESTING THE LINKAGES IN LARGE CANADIAN CITIES.
- Author
-
Walks, R. Alan and Maaranen, Richard
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,INNER cities ,SOCIAL influence ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,IMMIGRANTS ,IMMIGRATION law - Abstract
Gentrification in the form of "neighborhood revitalization" is increasingly touted as one way of decreasing the social exclusion of residents of poor inner-city neighborhoods and of increasing levels of social mix and social interaction between different classes and ethnic groups. Yet the gentrification literature also suggests that the process may lead to increased social conflict, displacement of poorer residents to lower quality housing elsewhere, and, ultimately, social polarization. Much of this hinges on whether gentrifying neighborhoods can remain socially mixed, and whether neighborhood compositional changes result in more or less of a polarized class and ethnic structure. However, the impact of revitalization and gentrification on levels of social mix, income polarization, or ethnic diversity within neighborhoods remains unclear and under-explored. This study addresses this gap by examining the relationship between the timing of gentrification, changes in the income structure, and shifts in immigrant concentration and ethnic diversity, using census tract data for each decade from 1971 to 2001 in Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. This research demonstrates that gentrification is followed by declining, rather than improving, levels of social mix, ethnic diversity, and immigrant concentration within affected neighborhoods. At the same time, gentrification is implicated in the growth of neighborhood income polarization and inequality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. THE WORLD SETTLES IN: WASHINGTON, DC, AS AN IMMIGRANT GATEWAY.
- Author
-
Price, Marie, Cheung, Ivan, Friedman, Samantha, and Singer, Audrey
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,ETHNICITY ,GEOGRAPHY ,IMMIGRANTS ,LAND settlement patterns - Abstract
This study examines the ethnic geography of a new immigrant gateway, Washington, DC. According to Census 2000, more than 832,000 foreign-born individuals reside in the Washington metropolitan region. This research uses Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) data in an effort to map the residential decisions of immigrant newcomers by zip code from 1990 to 1998. Spatially, a very diverse, dispersed, and suburbanized pattern of newcomer settlement emerges, a pattern that contradicts many of the assumptions of the spatial assimilation model. Whereas the overall pattern is one of dispersion, an analysis of country-of-origin groups results in a settlement continuum ranging from concentrated (Vietnamese) to highly dispersed (Indians). Current research in Washington suggests that a pattern of heterolocalism (community without propinquity) may be a better model for understanding the role of immigrant settlement patterns and networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Contemporary Trends in Immigration to the United States: Gender, Labor-Market Incorporation, and Implications for Family Formation.
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *WOMEN immigrants , *HARDSHIP , *FAMILIES , *ECONOMIC development , *UNDOCUMENTED immigrants - Abstract
This article provides an overview of contemporary trends in immigration to the United States and a descriptive analysis of gendered patterns of immigrants' economic incorporation. Since the 1970s, both legal and illegal female immigration to the United States has increased steadily, suggesting a trend toward more permanent settlement compared with that of the past. Today, more than half of the immigrants to the United States are female. Although these women often migrate for reasons similar to those of men (such as seeking better economic opportunities or escaping persecution and extreme hardships), their experiences with labor-market incorporation and family formation differ from those of men, raising new issues for the understanding of the role of gender in immigrant settlement and adaption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
42. Migration and settlement of immigrants in a rural Danish municipality
- Author
-
Helle Nørgaard
- Subjects
Immigrant settlement ,Moving motives ,Place belonging - Abstract
Since 2000, international migration has increased in several European countries with settlement in both urban and rural areas. However, the proportion of immigrants settling in rural areas is much larger in the Nordic regions compared to other European countries (Hedberg & Haandrikman, 2014; Søholt, Aasland, Onsager & Vestby, 2012; Søholt, Tronstad, Rose & Vestby, 2015). At the same time, the Nordic countries have been the destination of a large number of asylum seekers and refugees, many of whom are settled in rural areas. Thus, migration of international migrants; immigrants and refugees change the demographic and ethnic composition of rural populations and contribute to the transformation of rural places (Hedberg, Forsberg, & Najib, 2012; Stenbacka: 2012 & 2016 and Søholt, Stenbacka & Nørgaard, 2017). This paper is based on a case study in a rural Danish municipality, where immigrants constitute an increasing proportion of the population. The paper is based on interviews with international migrants and explores why immigrants have chosen to settle in a rural Danish community, how they experience living there and whether they plan to stay. The paper also draws on data from Statistics Denmark on population development and demographic characteristics of the population. The case study is part of a comparative Nordic research project; MultiRur which examines immigrant settlement in perspective of exclusion and inclusion.
- Published
- 2018
43. The Role of Multicultural Media in Connecting Municipal Governments with Ethnocultural and Immigrant Communities: The Case of Ottawa
- Author
-
Veronis, L. and Rukhsana Ahmed
- Subjects
lcsh:Sociology (General) ,Immigrant Integration ,Multicultural Media Producers ,Immigrant Settlement ,Ethnocultural and Immigrant Communities ,lcsh:HM401-1281 ,Multicultural Media ,Municipal Government ,lcsh:P87-96 ,lcsh:Communication. Mass media - Abstract
This paper aims to advance understanding of the role ethnic and multicultural media can play in connecting municipal governments and Ethnocultural and Immigrant Communities (EICs). Using an innovative mixed-methods approach and methodological triangulation, we compare the access to and use of multicultural media among four EICs—the Chinese, Latin American, Somali, and South Asian—in Ottawa, Canada. Our cross-comparative study yields three main findings: 1) members of participating communities proactively and strategically use a variety of sources to access information about local services; 2) noteworthy differences exist in the access to and use of different types of media both across and within the four EICs, due to demographic and cultural differences; and 3) participants shared challenges and opportunities that multicultural media afford to better connect municipal government and EICs. The paper’s findings make important empirical contributions to the literature on the integrative potential of ethnic and multicultural media by strengthening the reliability of data, validity of findings, and broadening and deepening understanding the role multicultural media play in promoting collaboration between city governments and diverse EICs.
- Published
- 2015
44. Changes in the countryside:Settlement of immigrants and refugees in a rural municipality
- Author
-
Nørgaard, Helle
- Subjects
Immigrant settlement, moving motives and place belonging ,Immigrant settlement ,Moving motives ,Place belonging - Abstract
The majority of the Danish population resides in large urban regions, while the population of many rural municipalities are declining as out-migration exceeds in-migration. However, due to global migration processes with settlement of immigrants and refugees, population decline has been reduced and the population is increasingly becoming multicultural and ethnically diverse.The background of this paper is a Nordic research project MultiRur which examines immigrant settlement in the perspective of integration, transnationalism, meaning of place and resilience. The municipality of Hjørring is the Danish case in the project which is characterized by more than 100 different nationalities representing social, demographic, cultural and ethnic change.Based on interviews with internal and international migrants as well as refugees, this paper applies a biographical perspective on migrants’ moving motives, settlement and place belonging. Aspects hereof are related to civil society and whether migrants feel welcome and are part of local or other communities. Other themes are experience related to housing, workplace, local institutions and the rural setting and lastly, how migrants communicate and connect with family and friends. Thus, focus in the study are the narratives of the migrants: how they talk about, reflect upon and make sense of their settlement and everyday life in a rural area of Denmark. Changes in the countryside: settlement of immigrants and refugees in a rural municipality Helle Nørgaard (hen@sbi.aau.dk), Danish Building Research Institute, Aalborg University, CPHThe majority of the Danish population resides in large urban regions, while the population of many rural municipalities are declining as out-migration exceeds in-migration. However, due to global migration processes with settlement of immigrants and refugees, population decline has been reduced and the population is increasingly becoming multicultural and ethnically diverse.The background of this paper is a Nordic research project MultiRur which examines immigrant settlement in the perspective of integration, transnationalism, meaning of place and resilience.The municipality of Hjørring is the Danish case in the project which is characterized by more than 100 different nationalities representing social, demographic, cultural and ethnic change.Based on interviews with internal and international migrants as well as refugees, this paper applies a biographical perspective on migrants’ moving motives, settlement and place belonging. Aspects hereof are related to civil society and whether migrants feel welcome and are part of local or other communities. Other themes are experience related to housing, workplace, local institutions and the rural setting and lastly, how migrants communicate and connect with family and friends. Thus, focus in the study are the narratives of the migrants: how they talk about, reflect upon and make sense of their settlement and everyday life in a rural area of Denmark. Keywords: Immigrant settlement, movingmotives and place belonging.
- Published
- 2017
45. Moving: Patterns of Immigrant Settlement and Spatial Mobility
- Author
-
Rubén G. Rumbaut
- Subjects
persistent ethnicity ,Labor migration ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,pioneers ,chain migration ,urbanization ,spatial mobility ,Genealogy ,entrepreneurial migrants ,professional migrants ,Geography ,Portrait ,Economy ,recruitment ,refugees and exiles ,Spatial mobility ,labor migrants ,Settlement (litigation) ,dispersal ,ethnic concentration ,new destinations ,media_common ,immigrant settlement - Abstract
DRAFT – DO NOT DISTRIBUTE, QUOTE OR CITE WITHOUT THE AUTHORS’ PERMISSION. IMMIGRANT AMERICA: A PORTRAIT (4th edition, forthcoming) Alejandro Portes and Ruben G. Rumbaut Chapter 3 Moving: Patterns of Immigrant Settlement and Spatial Mobility
- Published
- 2014
46. Evaluation of settlement service programs for newcomers in ontario: A geographical perspective
- Author
-
Wang, Shuguang and Truelove, Marie
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Postcolonial Incorporation of the Different Other
- Author
-
Ku, Jane S
- Subjects
Race and Ethnicity ,Sociology of Culture ,neo-liberal multiculturalism ,postcolonial condition ,difference ,migrant experience and history ,immigrant narratives ,Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,racism ,immigrant settlement - Abstract
This article approaches the study of incorporation of ‘visible minority’ immigrants in Peterborough, Canada by insisting on framing their experiences in the legacies of colonialism, racial and ethnic formations, and processes that spill over nation-bound discourses. It attempts to understand the postcolonial condition from the perspective of migrants inserting themselves in the West. Using a postcolonial lens on difference, immigrant narratives about experience of becoming settled in Canada are analysed as constructions of ethnic postcolonial resistance and accommodation. The article reveals how immigrants negotiate with being stigmatized as different. The agency of migrants is emphasized while paying attention to the discursive limits in the new space where they try to re-establish themselves. It explores how immigrants read into the inconsistencies of the Canadian multicultural story as their own experiences contradict it. Their challenge and counter-narratives are part of the reconstruction of migrant postcolonial history that allows them to normalize their presence in Canada and to suture their history to the Canadian one. Collective experiences and knowledge among immigrants in the local space are important in supporting their challenge to neo-liberal multicultural and exclusive national discourses.
- Published
- 2012
48. Migration in a Globalised World. New Research Issues and Prospects
- Author
-
Cédric Audebert, Mohamed Kamel Doraï, Institut Français du Proche-Orient (IFPO), MIN AFF ETRANG-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Migrations internationales, espaces et sociétés (MIGRINTER UMR 6588), Université de Poitiers-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Laboratoire caribéen de sciences sociales (LC2S), and Université des Antilles (UA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
- Subjects
diaspora and transnational studies ,050402 sociology ,Refugee ,Transnationalism ,forced migration ,Context (language use) ,integration ,globalisation ,Development ,migration ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,Migration studies ,Globalization ,0504 sociology ,Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,10. No inequality ,Développement ,International migration ,Refugees ,[SHS.SOCIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Sociology ,Human migration ,business.industry ,Migrations internationales ,05 social sciences ,Transnationalisme ,Gender studies ,[SHS.GEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Geography ,[SHS.ANTHRO-SE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Social Anthropology and ethnology ,[SHS.SCIPO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Political science ,0506 political science ,Forced migration ,Social cohesion ,Political economy ,Réfugiés ,Cohésion sociale ,transnational studies ,Asylum seeker ,business ,immigrant settlement - Abstract
In the last two decades, significant changes have taken place in the composition, orientation and dynamics of the international migration in the context of globalisation. Their consequences on the evolution of origin and settlement societies and on transnational relations are remarkable. Migration in Globalised World explores the social challenges associated with these new trends and the way research has responded to them. Theoretical reflections and empirical insights have been conducted along four broad lines: migration and social cohesion; transnationalisation and the transnational approach; the migratThe last two decades have witnessed sweeping changes in the composition, orientation and dynamics of international migration. While it's no surprise these transformations affect societies of origin and settlement, we still seek to understand how and why they carry with them certain social challenges. Migration in a Globalised World shines a light. Ten chapters astutely present theoretical and empirical insights by experts in the fields of international migration and social cohesion, transnationalisation, the migration-development nexus and the ever-blurring categories of refugee and asylum seeker. With its broad thematic scope and lively dialogue between French, Anglo-Saxon and Northern European academic traditions, this volume offers a major new perspective to further research and, potentially, to improve the quality of life in a globalised world.ion-development nexus; and the blurring categories of refugees and asylum seekers. Migration in a Globalised World offers a major new research perspective, whose strength lies in its broad thematic scope and in the dialogue between many academic traditions – among others, French, Anglo-Saxon and Northern European.
- Published
- 2010
49. Making Experience Meaningful: Interpreting Chinese Canadian Women's Personal Encounters with Racism
- Author
-
Ku, Jane S
- Subjects
Race and Ethnicity ,university ,interpretation of experience ,everyday racism ,biography ,Bilingual, Multilingual, and Multicultural Education ,Gender and Sexuality ,Chinese women ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,racism ,immigrant settlement - Abstract
Using Philomena Essed's theory on everyday racism, this paper explores how Chinese Canadian women interpret racism. It argues that differences in interpretation can be explained by examining personal biographies that attend to subjective experience and social context, and from which implications for anti-racist feminist epistemology can be drawn.
- Published
- 2005
50. Immigration and Immigrant Settlement in Australia : Political Responses, Discourses and New Challenges
- Author
-
Collins, Jock
- Subjects
globalisering ,International Migration and Ethnic Relations ,Australia ,Australien ,Internationell Migration och Etniska Relationer (IMER) ,mångkulturella samhällen ,globalisation ,multiculturalism ,immigration ,immigrant settlement - Abstract
Australian society has been shaped more by immigration and immigrants than most countries in the world today. This paper examines the changes to the character and composition of Australian immigration in the post-1945 period and analyses the impact of these changes on the public discourses and policy responses related to Australian immigration and settlement philosophies and practices in Australia today. It first looks at the Australian immigration experience, and how immigration policy has changed in recent decades as a result of globalisation. It then outlines the changing composition and character of the Australian immigration intake as a consequence of these policy changes, and at the key discourses about Australian immigration that have accompanied these changes. The paper then examines the way in which immigrant settlement or integration policies and practices have changed in light of the impact of globalisation on the political, economic and social climate in Australian society, with a particular emphasis on the debates about Australian multiculturalism. Finally, the paper addresses the new challenges for government policy makers and for decision makers in the private and non-government sectors of Australian society that are a consequence to the changing dynamics of the Australian immigration experience in a changing global world.
- Published
- 2003
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.