加拿大移民:人口、经济和社会挑战

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Christopher G. Anderson, L. Driedger, S. Halli
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Canada has not always opened its door to immigrants and refugees, and those admitted have not always found themselves welcomed as equal members of society. For much of the country's history, immigration has been used as a means to increase the labour pool in the pursuit of economic growth, and most immigrants did not share in the wealth that was thereby created. Of course, the immigrant experience in Canada (and the Canadian experience with immigration) has never simply been an economic process, but also one of managing the reality of social diversity and understanding the meaning of political equality. As well, the experience has involved a search for safety by the persecuted, and Canada's response to the needs of refugees constitutes another way in which to assess the country's success in the twentieth century.Thus, Caplan's statement - like the familiar refrain that Canada is \"a nation of immigrants\" - is at first blush telling more for what it hides than what it reveals. The books under review here help to develop the tools necessary to comprehend more fully the complexity of what it means for Canada to succeed as a country of permanent settlement for immigrants and refugees. The five volumes reflect the diversity of the field across disciplines and methodologies. Here the reader is drawn through the realms of demography, history, political science and sociology, carried by empirical and theoretical work, macro- and micro-level studies, qualitative and quantitative analyses, archival research and surveys of the literature, often undertaken in compelling combinations. The authors and editors explore the distant and recent past, but always with an eye towards the present and the near future. If there is one common theme that joins these texts it is that to understand Canada, it is necessary to study the many ways in which newcomers have shaped its evolution. Not surprisingly, the authors and editors do not manage all that they set out to achieve. Indeed, individually and collectively, these works reveal in particular the extent to which the last quarter of the twentieth century remains little understood. None the less, each book makes a distinct contribution to the study of Canadian immigration (and therefore of Canada as well) and establishes important signposts for future research.With the publication of The Making of the Mosaic, a notable need in the Canadian immigration policy literature has at last been, if not satiated, then at least well satisfied. Prior to Ninette Kelley and Michael Trebilcock's volume, students lacked a comprehensive guide to this policy area.(2) In providing such a resource, the authors offer more than just an introduction for those unfamiliar with the field, or an overview for others already well-versed. They also provide, in effect, a useful guide to the literature that brings attention to some of its strengths and weaknesses. 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引用次数: 82

摘要

《一个移民的国家:过去、现在和未来》克里斯托弗·g·安德森著。Shiva S. Halli和Leo Driedger。多伦多:多伦多大学出版社,1999。“移民使加拿大在上个世纪取得了成功,”公民和移民部长埃莉诺·卡普兰(Elinor Caplan)在宣布政府打算在2000年接纳20万至22.5万移民和难民时如此宣称。这是一种评论,在这里评论的作者可能不会反驳,因为他们都以自己的方式,探索了新来者在加拿大历史上的各种贡献方式。然而,尽管部长的评论是作为千禧一代乐观主义的一种表达,但移民故事还有另一个更黑暗的一面,这也是下面几本书的重点。加拿大并不总是向移民和难民敞开大门,而那些被接纳的人也并不总是发现自己受到社会平等成员的欢迎。在这个国家历史的大部分时间里,移民一直被用作增加劳动力储备以追求经济增长的手段,大多数移民并没有分享由此创造的财富。当然,加拿大的移民经历(以及加拿大的移民经历)从来不是一个简单的经济过程,也是一个管理社会多样性现实和理解政治平等意义的过程。此外,这方面的经验还包括受迫害者寻求安全,加拿大对难民需要的反应是评估该国在二十世纪取得成功的另一种方式。因此,卡普兰的声明——就像人们熟悉的“加拿大是一个移民国家”——乍一看,它隐藏的东西比它揭示的东西更多。本文所讨论的书籍有助于开发必要的工具,以更全面地理解加拿大作为移民和难民永久定居国家的成功意味着什么。这五卷反映了跨学科和方法领域的多样性。本书通过实证和理论工作、宏观和微观研究、定性和定量分析、档案研究和文献调查,将人口学、历史学、政治学和社会学等领域的内容吸引读者,这些内容往往以令人信服的方式结合在一起。作者和编辑探索遥远和最近的过去,但总是着眼于现在和不久的将来。如果这些文本有一个共同的主题,那就是要了解加拿大,有必要研究新来者塑造其演变的许多方式。不足为奇的是,作者和编辑并没有做到他们所要达到的目标。的确,无论是个人还是集体,这些作品都特别揭示了人们对20世纪最后25年知之甚少的程度。尽管如此,每本书都对加拿大移民(因此也是加拿大)的研究做出了独特的贡献,并为未来的研究建立了重要的路标。随着《马赛克的制作》一书的出版,加拿大移民政策文献中一个显著的需求,即使没有得到满足,至少也得到了很好的满足。在Ninette Kelley和Michael Trebilcock的卷之前,学生们缺乏对这一政策领域的全面指导。(2)在提供这样的资源时,作者提供的不仅仅是对那些不熟悉该领域的人的介绍,或者对已经精通的人的概述。实际上,它们还提供了一个有用的文献指南,使人们注意到它的一些优点和缺点。在寻求“描述和解释加拿大移民政策演变的主要时代或事件,以揭示和明确表达参与公众辩论的思想或价值观、利益和问题,并检查在每个时期调解这些思想、利益和问题的机构”(4)的过程中,凯利和特雷比尔科克给自己设定了一个艰巨的任务。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Immigrant Canada : demographic, economic, and social challenges
A Nation of Immigrants: Past, Present and FutureChristopher G. AndersonEds. Shiva S. Halli and Leo Driedger. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999."Immigration made the last century a success for Canada."(1) So declared Elinor Caplan, the minister of Citizenship and Immigration, as she announced the government's intention to admit between 200,000 and 225,000 immigrants and refugees into the country during 2000. It is a remark that none of the authors under review here would probably contest, as they all, each in their own fashion, explore various ways in which newcomers have contributed to Canada throughout its history. Whereas the minister's comment was offered as an expression of millennial optimism, however, there is another, darker side to the immigration story that is also the focus of the books examined below. Canada has not always opened its door to immigrants and refugees, and those admitted have not always found themselves welcomed as equal members of society. For much of the country's history, immigration has been used as a means to increase the labour pool in the pursuit of economic growth, and most immigrants did not share in the wealth that was thereby created. Of course, the immigrant experience in Canada (and the Canadian experience with immigration) has never simply been an economic process, but also one of managing the reality of social diversity and understanding the meaning of political equality. As well, the experience has involved a search for safety by the persecuted, and Canada's response to the needs of refugees constitutes another way in which to assess the country's success in the twentieth century.Thus, Caplan's statement - like the familiar refrain that Canada is "a nation of immigrants" - is at first blush telling more for what it hides than what it reveals. The books under review here help to develop the tools necessary to comprehend more fully the complexity of what it means for Canada to succeed as a country of permanent settlement for immigrants and refugees. The five volumes reflect the diversity of the field across disciplines and methodologies. Here the reader is drawn through the realms of demography, history, political science and sociology, carried by empirical and theoretical work, macro- and micro-level studies, qualitative and quantitative analyses, archival research and surveys of the literature, often undertaken in compelling combinations. The authors and editors explore the distant and recent past, but always with an eye towards the present and the near future. If there is one common theme that joins these texts it is that to understand Canada, it is necessary to study the many ways in which newcomers have shaped its evolution. Not surprisingly, the authors and editors do not manage all that they set out to achieve. Indeed, individually and collectively, these works reveal in particular the extent to which the last quarter of the twentieth century remains little understood. None the less, each book makes a distinct contribution to the study of Canadian immigration (and therefore of Canada as well) and establishes important signposts for future research.With the publication of The Making of the Mosaic, a notable need in the Canadian immigration policy literature has at last been, if not satiated, then at least well satisfied. Prior to Ninette Kelley and Michael Trebilcock's volume, students lacked a comprehensive guide to this policy area.(2) In providing such a resource, the authors offer more than just an introduction for those unfamiliar with the field, or an overview for others already well-versed. They also provide, in effect, a useful guide to the literature that brings attention to some of its strengths and weaknesses. In seeking "to describe and interpret the major epochs or episodes in the evolution of Canadian immigration policy with a view to uncovering and rendering explicit the ideas or values, the interests, and the issues that engaged public debates, and to examining the institutions through which these ideas, interests, and issues were mediated in each of these periods" (4), Kelley and Trebilcock have set themselves a formidable task. …
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