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  1. Statistics Canada report on race and ethnicity in Canada in 2022 The 2020 General Social Survey revealed that 92% of adult Canadians said that "[ethnic] diversity is a Canadian value". [15] About 25% of Canadians were "racialized"; [2] By 2021, 23% of the Canadian population were immigrants—the "largest proportion since Confederation ...

  2. Dec 15, 2022 · To address this data gap, Justice Canada collaborated with Statistics Canada to obtain the racialized identity of accused through a data linkage project.17,18 The study found that in 2015/16, Black people (adults and youth) were overrepresented by a factor of two in the accused population; Black people accounted for 6% of all accused, while ...

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    • Indigenous Peoples and Canadian Society
    • Francophone-Anglophone Relations
    • Immigrants and Canadian Society
    • Visible Minorities
    • The Relationship of Ethnic Groups to Anglophone and Francophone Cultures

    The relationship between Indigenous peoples and the rest of Canadian society is characterized first by "marginality" and dependence. The historical settlement and expansion of English and French societies led to the displacement of the Indigenous population. Land was the main concern of the successive Indian Acts (see Indian) and of the treaties. T...

    After the Conquest, the British progressively constructed a society parallel to the one that the French had already established. The institutions of the 2 subsocieties are critical for their respective members because they provide them with economic and political opportunities and because they embody their language, cultural values and traditions. ...

    The decrease in British representation led to a concomitant decrease in their control of the economy or of the political system or to a change in the status of Canada as a "white" society. Other European immigrants do not share equality with the charter groups. John Porter in The Vertical Mosaic argued that the crucial fact of Canadian life was the...

    The visibility of certain groups adds a dimension to the question of their full incorporation in Canadian society. Racism in Canada has been well documented in historical studies of immigration. Canadians manifest an ostrichlike approach to the problem, although studies reveal that prejudice and discrimination are a reality in Canada (see also Anti...

    This relationship raises the question of how certain manifestations of individual and collective ethnicity (if they are to exist) are to be recognized and incorporated into Canadian society and how social institutions are to be modified to accommodate and recognize various cultural traditions. The multiculturalism policies and programs of the vario...

  4. Indigenous Canadians. The only non-immigrant ethnic group in Canada, Indigenous people were once the only human inhabitants of North America (numbering approximately 2.8 to 5.7 million north of Mexico (Koch et al., 2019)), but by 2011 they made up only 4.3% of the Canadian populace (Statistics Canada, 2013). How and Why They Came

  5. Statistics Canada projects that immigrants will represent between 29.1% and 34.0% of Canada's population in 2041, compared with 23.0% in 2021, while the Canadian population with at least one foreign born parent (first and second generation persons) could rise to between 49.8% and 54.3%, up from 44.0% in 2021.

  6. Last Edited March 20, 2020. Canada’s federal multiculturalism policy was adopted in 1971 by Pierre Trudeau ’s Liberal government. An unexpected by-product of the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism (1963–69), multiculturalism was intended as a policy solution to manage both rising francophone nationalism, particularly in ...

  7. Ethnocultural variables. The Immigrant population by selected places of birth, admission category and period of immigration, 2021 Census shows the distribution of the immigrant population by selected places of birth and by various geographic regions in Canada. Two charts are presented: one is for places of birth and the second, geographic areas.

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