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  1. Feb 15, 2016 · Many came to Canada from Europe during the period between 1945, when the war ended, until 1951 when the International Refugee Organization (IRO) closed its displaced persons camps. For Canada, the arrival of this large wave of people marked a notable chapter in the nation’s immigration history. While the largest groups of displaced persons to ...

  2. The arrival of displaced persons in Canada between 1945 and 1951 was designated a national historic event in 2014. Historical importance: The arrival of more than 157,000 political refugees who were known as displaced persons or “DPs.”. Commemorative plaque: Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21, 1055 Marginal Road, Halifax, Nova Scotia ...

    • When did displaced people start immigrating?1
    • When did displaced people start immigrating?2
    • When did displaced people start immigrating?3
    • When did displaced people start immigrating?4
    • When did displaced people start immigrating?5
    • Immigration to New France
    • Loyalist Immigration
    • Irish Immigration
    • Western Migration
    • Migrants and Urban Centres
    • Immigration and Racism
    • Dismantling Racial and Ethnic Barriers
    • Immigration Point System
    • Refugee Migration After 1945
    • Immigration in The Late 20th Century

    Throughout the 17th and much of the 18th century, European colonial administrations, charged with overseeing what would become Canada, did not consider settlement a priority. French or British governments initially seemed unprepared to expend vast quantities of money or energy necessary to encourage settlement. Nor was migration to Canada popular i...

    Many of Quebec's new British rulers were soon forced to accept many thousands of English-speaking and largely Protestant settlers displaced by the American Revolution. Known as United Empire Loyalists, they were largely political refugees. Many of them migrated northward not by choice but because they had to. Many either did not wish to become citi...

    Throughout the mid-19th century, the colonies — Canada West in particular — returned to a pattern of painfully slow and erratic economic growth. Officially encouraged immigration from Britain and even the US gradually filled the better agricultural lands in the colony and bolstered new commercial or administrative towns. The new immigrants were gen...

    With a relatively low death rate, high birthrate, and small but continual migration from the British Isles, the immediate post-Confederation era had its overpopulation problems ( see Population). This issue was further compounded by the increasing rarity of farmable land. Meanwhile, the US — with its seemingly boundless supply of free, fertile land...

    In spite of government precautions, not all immigrants committed themselves to resource exploitation or agriculture. Like the Irish before them, many non-English speaking and largely non-Protestant immigrants rejected a life of rural isolation, choosing to work in cities. Furthermore, many of these migrants only saw themselves as living in Canada o...

    Canadian immigration policy and administration had bowed to economic necessity by allowing some migrants into Canada. However, it only did so reluctantly. Soon enough, restrictive immigration controls were put in place to stop immigration along ethnic and racial lines. Chinese migration was particularly targeted. Measures like the Chinese head tax,...

    At war's end in 1945, Canadian immigration regulations remained unchanged from the restrictive pre-war years. Yet change was not long in coming. Driven by a postwar economic boom, growing job market, and a resulting demand for labour, Canada gradually re-opened its doors to European immigration. Initially, to immigrants Canada traditionally preferr...

    That does not mean that anyone who wishes to enter Canada may do so. While restrictions on account of race or national origin are gone, Canada still maintains strict criteria for determining who is and who is not a desirable candidate for Canadian entry. In the late 1960s, Canada introduced a point system to set merit-based standards for individual...

    Since the end of the Second World War, refugees and others dispossessed by war and violence have become a significant part of Canada's immigration flow. In the postwar labour shortage, Canada admitted tens of thousands of displaced persons. Many had been made homeless by the war or who, at war's end, found themselves outside of their country of cit...

    In the 1980s, the number of those entering Canada and applying for refugeestatus grew, and the Canadian determination process was hard-pressed to process applicants quickly. Nor were refugee claimants universally welcomed by Canadians. Some Canadians worried that many of the refugee claimants were not really legitimate refugees but individuals look...

  3. 2006: In the fall of 2006, Canada accepted the first group of 810 Karen refugees from Thailand. The majority of the Karen people live in Myanmar, Burma, but they also comprise the largest of the Hill Tribes of northern and western Thailand, near the border with Myanmar. Political struggle and persecution resound throughout Karen history.

  4. Feb 7, 2006 · Several federal government departments or agencies have been responsible for immigration policy since the Second World War: the Ministry of Mines and Resources (1936-1949), the Department of Citizenship and Immigration (1950–66, 1992–2016), the Department of Manpower and Immigration (1966-77), and the Canada Employment and Immigration Commission (1977–1992). Since 2016, immigration is ...

  5. Displaced persons such as surviving Jewish people from Germany and Poland were encouraged to find refuge in Canada after the defeat of Germany and Italy. Refugees from war-torn countries such as Hungary (1956) and Czechoslovakia (1968) were invited on an ad hoc basis according to their individual circumstances.

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  7. Jun 19, 2018 · Most were educated men and their families who easily gained entry as regular immigrants. 1971–1972. South Asians including Ismailis are driven out of Africa because of their race, religion, and economic status. The 5,700 refugees accepted by Canada represent the first large group of non-white refugees to arrive en masse in Canadian history ...

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