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  1. Apr 22, 2013 · In 2002, the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA) was passed. The new law replaced the 1976 Immigration Act. It notably made immigration into Canada harder, including for refugees. However, the Act did also make it easier for people in common-law or same-sex relationships to enter Canada.

  2. Population fluctuations. The annual number of landed immigrants in Canada has fluctuated considerably over the last 150 years. Some of these fluctuations can be linked to immigration policy changes, others to Canada's economic situation or world events connected with the movement of migrants and refugees. For example, in the late 1800s, the ...

  3. In 1971, for the first time in Canadian history, the majority of those immigrating into Canada were of non-European ancestry. Following the Immigration Act of 1962 and 1967 reforms, about 64,000 West Indians came to Canada. Canadians of Caribbean origin belong to one of the largest non-European ethnic groups in Canada.

  4. Feb 7, 2006 · Immigration policy is the way the government controls via laws and regulations who gets to come and settle in Canada. Since Confederation, immigration policy has been tailored to grow the population, settle the land, and provide labour and financial capital for the economy. Immigration policy also tends to reflect the racial attitudes or ...

  5. A chronology focusing on refugees and discrimination. Part 2: 1950 - 1999. [Previous: Part 1] 1950. The Department of Citizenship and Immigration was formed. June 1950. Order in council issued replacing previous measures on immigration selection. The preference was maintained for British, Irish, French and U.S. immigrants.

  6. Unfortunately, the head tax legislation continued well into the 1920s, when Chinese immigration was virtually suspended. As noted in the chart above, that legislation by the Canadian government is known by Chinese Canadians as “Humiliation Day”, July 1, 1923 (Lee, 2017), the date the Chinese Exclusion Act was passed.

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  8. immigration, the characteris-tics of immigrants are quite different. This change reflects many factors: developments and modifications in Canada’s immigration polices; the dis-placement of peoples by wars and political upheaval; the cycle of economic “booms and busts” in Canada and other countries; Canada’s member-ship in the Commonwealth;

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