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IMMIGRATION TIMELINE: 1867 - PRESENT
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IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

Feb 13, 2016

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IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:. 1867 - PRESENT. 1867: BNA ACT → Canada is Created → Attempts are made to populate the country → Immigrants mainly come from British Isles. 1878: National Policy. → Attempts are made to settle western Canada - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

1867 - PRESENT

Page 2: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

• 1867: BNA ACT

• → Canada is Created• → Attempts are made to populate the country

• → Immigrants mainly come from British Isles

Page 3: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

1878: National Policy

• → Attempts are made to settle western Canada

• → Target not just people from British Isles, but Northern Europeans

Page 4: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

1870s &1880s: Asian Immigration• → Immigrants from China, Italy, and Japan

came to work on railway• → A “Head Tax” forced them to pay in

order to enter the country

Page 5: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

1900-1913: Pre-WWI• → Huge boom in immigration• → Clifford Sifton is Minister in charge• → Increase in population of Western

Canada (1905: Sask & Alberta created)• → Jewish/Italian/Greeks

arrive in urban areas

Page 6: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

The immigration laws during the late 19th and early 20th centuries were discriminatory towards certain groups:

• Poor Immigrants• Those considered mentally incompetent• Non-Europeans (i.e. non-Whites)

Page 7: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

1914-1918: WWI

• → Pause in immigration • → During war discrimination towards

Canadians of Germans, Austrians, Turkish origin

• → Immigration picks up in 1920s when people come from Germany, Russia, Ukraine

Page 8: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

1929-1945: Great Depression & WW2

• → Pause in immigration• → Jews and other persecuted groups are

not admitted to Canada • → Canadians of German,

Italian, and Japanese origins are placed in internment camps

Page 9: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

Internment Camps• After the bombing of Pearl Harbor in

1942, the government passed an Order in Council authorizing the removal of "enemy aliens" within a 100-mile radius of the BC coast.

• On March 4, 1942 22,000 Japanese Canadians were given 24 hours to pack before being interned. They were first incarcerated in a temporary facility at Hastings Park Race Track in Vancouver.

• Women, children and older people were sent to internment camps in the Interior.

• Men who complained about separation from their families or violated the curfew were sent to the "prisoner of war" camps in Ontario.

• The property of the Japanese Canadians - land, businesses, and other assets - were confiscated by the government and sold, and the proceeds used to pay for their internment.

Page 10: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

1945+: Post-WW2• → Great increase in immigration• → More diversity in immigrant groups but

they are still coming from Europe (Italians, Greeks, Portuguese, Dutch, Poland, USSR)

• → Baby Boom! (people starting families)

Page 11: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

Immigration Act of 1952

• → Still prioritized “White” immigration i.e. people from European countries

• → Individuals who suffered from mental illness, had a disability (deaf, blind, etc.), a sickness, alcoholics, prostitutes, homosexuals and others are barred from coming to Canada.

Page 12: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

1971: Multiculturalism• → Multiculturalism becomes an official

policy of the Canadian government • → Multiculturalism promotes the equality

of different cultural groups

Page 13: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

1976: Immigration Act

• → This act reflected multicultural principles and corrected some of the past

discriminatory policies• → The act opened the door to immigrants

from all corners of the world (Asia, Africa, Latin America, and more...)

• → People would now be selected based on education, job skills, age, language, and other criteria

Page 14: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

1976: Immigration Act (cont’d)• → Top 5 Countries for immigrants in the 90s?

Hong Kong, China, India, Philippines, Sri Lanka• → Mostly settle in large cities (Toronto,

Vancouver, Montreal)• → Refugees are accepted (people that are

escaping problems in their home country)Ex: Vietnamese “Boat People”

Page 15: IMMIGRATION TIMELINE:

1991: Canada-Quebec Agreement

• → Quebec is given sole responsibility in selecting immigrants to the province

• → Priority is given to French-speaking regions of the world