Being Canadian: Citizenship in Canada
- 1 February 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Citizenship Studies
- Vol. 2 (1) , 133-152
- https://doi.org/10.1080/13621029808420674
Abstract
This article analyses interviews conducted in 1996–97 with 78civic leaders in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. In part, the interviews focused on what it means to respondents to be Canadian. Among the respondents were 36 immigrants and 23 persons not of European ancestry, including four aboriginal people. The article addresses the challenge of creating a sense of citizenship—a moral sense of belonging—among a population of increasingly diverse origin in anglophone Canada. The argument proposed is that despite the diverse ancestral and geographical origins of the inhabitants of the country, Canadianness exists. Canadians, both native‐born and immigrants, recognize themselves as Canadians. They do so because they recognize the opportunities and freedoms available to them in Canada, and the day‐to‐day respect they enjoy. To be Canadian and recognized as such by others is meaningful. Even very recent immigrants do not define themselves primarily as members of their ancestral cultural communities. Spinner's concept of pluralistic integration seems a better way to describe Canadian society than the popular concept of multiculturalism.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Politics and Biculturalism in Canada: The Flag Debate*Australian Journal of Politics and History, 2008
- Nation, Identity, Rights: Reflections on WL. Morton’s Canadian IdentityJournal of Canadian Studies, 1994
- The Boundaries of CitizenshipPublished by Project MUSE ,1994
- Ethnic Pluralism under Siege: Popular and Partisan Opposition to MulticulturalismCanadian Public Policy, 1992
- The apogee of nationalism, 1918-1950Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1992
- Measuring ethnicity: Is ‘Canadian’ an evolving indigenous category?Ethnic and Racial Studies, 1992
- Canadian multiculturalism as IdeologyEthnic and Racial Studies, 1983
- Exploring the Ideology of Canadian MulticulturalismCanadian Public Policy, 1982
- Symbolic ethnicity: The future of ethnic groups and cultures in America*Ethnic and Racial Studies, 1979
- The economic adaptation of West Indians in Toronto, Canada*Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue canadienne de sociologie, 1976