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Detalles del documento

 

Imprima y guarde

Documento

Discrimination and Difference: Canadian Immigration Policy from a World Systems Perspective

Fecha

1996

Autores

Rachel Collins

Resumen

This paper explores discrimination in immigration practices and the division of labour in Canada through the lens of world systems theory. Canadian immigration policy has clearly moved away from explicitly racist hierarchies and classifications. However, examining the phenomenal growth in the use of temporary labour highlights the ways in which `race' or ethnicity, class, and gender can intersect to create forms of triple oppression, excluding people from citizenship. The Live-In Caregiver Program is considered as an example of these processes. The Business Immigration Program and recent changes in immigration policy affecting refugees are also briefly considered. Attention is drawn to the historical relations between the expropriation of resources and wealth, and the construction of `difference'.

Nombre de la conferencia

Canadian Association for the Study of International Development Conference

Lugar de la Conferencia

St. Catherines (Ontario)

Archivos adjuntos

Los sectores económicos

Agriculture and horticulture workers, Occupations in services - Domestic work, Sales and service occupations - general, Trades, transport and equipment operators and related occupations - general, Labourers in food, beverage and associated products processing, Dancers, y Otro

Tipos de contenido

Análisis de políticas

Los grupos destinatarios

Los investigadores

Relevancia geográfica

National relevance

Esferas de la actividad

Estudios culturales y étnicas, Estudios en Género y Sexualidad, y Ciencias Políticas

Idiomas

Inglés