This timely volume examines how policies, institutions, and places influence the lives of immigrants and temporary migrants to Canada and how, in turn, those newcomers transform the cities in which they live.
Social Resilience and International Migration in the Canadian City draws attention to disparities in outcomes for migrants and proposes strategies to enhance their participation in cities of all sizes. Focused on Ontario and Quebec, chapters pinpoint factors that affect the settlement and integration of immigrants, as well as growing numbers of international students, foreign workers, and refugee claimants. Contributors illustrate how federal, provincial, and municipal policies and diverse institutions - from grassroots churches to settlement agencies - can influence migrants' capacity to navigate and leverage the resources required to overcome integration challenges. The book's social resilience framework attends to the social supports that empower migrants to take collective action for their own futures. As migrants interact with a broad range of institutions, those institutions are transformed and become more resilient themselves.
Directed at a wide audience of community and government practitioners, migration policy experts, scholars, and civil society activists, Social Resilience and International Migration in the Canadian City provides crucial insight about the policies necessary for helping both migrants and cities thrive, offering ideas for effective implementation.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
"This well-researched and well-structured collection constitutes a multifaceted exploration of social resilience. The contributors offer valuable insights and recommendations for policy and social change." Adele Garnier, Universite Laval "This volume will be welcomed by scholars and students in migration studies, ranging from political and legal studies, social work, and religious studies to social geography and urban planning." Miu Chung Yan, University of British Columbia "A valuable and timely resource for policymakers and settlement service providers, particularly as communities wrestle with the concept of resilience in the context of increasing migrant flows nationally and globally." Sarah Zell, University of Winnipeg
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978-0-2280-2505-4 (9780228025054)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Valerie Preston is professor emerita in the Department of Geography and senior scholar in the Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change at York University.
John Shields is professor emeritus in the Department of Politics and Public Administration at Toronto Metropolitan University.
Tara Bedard is executive director at the Waterloo Region Immigration Partnership.