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  1. Apr 22, 2013 · Modern-Day Immigration to Canada. Canada receives a considerable number of immigrants every year. From 2001 to 2014, an average of around 249,500 landed immigrants settled in Canada every year. In 2015, more than 271,800 migrants were admitted while this number increased to over 296,300 in 2016.

  2. Feb 7, 2006 · Share Print. 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 ...

  3. 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 ...

  4. 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.

  5. During this time, the government encouraged immigration from Europe, this time promoting immigration from the United Kingdom and Western Europe. At this time, the political climate in Eastern Europe created mistrust of communism by the West that became known as the Cold War , which essentially stopped open immigration from this region of Europe (Troper, 2021).

  6. Amendments were made to Chinese Immigration Act expanding the list of prohibited persons and narrowing the classes of persons exempt from the head tax. 1908: A border inspection service was created on the U.S.-Canada border. 1910: Immigration Act. This Act gave the government enormous discretionary power to regulate immigration through Orders ...

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  8. The Immigration Act of 1910 expanded the list of prohibited immigrants and gave the government greater discretionary authority concerning the admissibility and deportation of immigrants. Immigrants determined to be “unsuited to the climate or requirements of Canada” were prohibited, as were those sponsored by charitable institutions.

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