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In the 1950s and 1960s, immigration bureaucrats in the Department
of Citizenship and Immigration played an important yet
unacknowledged role in transforming Canada’s immigration policy.
In response to external economic and political pressures for
change, high-level bureaucrats developed new admissions criteria
gradually and experimentally while personally processing thousands
of individual immigration cases per year. Making Middle-Class
Multiculturalism shows how bureaucrats’ perceptions and
judgements about the admissibility of individuals – in
socioeconomic, racial, and moral terms – influenced the creation
of formal admissions criteria for skilled workers and family
immigrants that continue to shape immigration to Canada. A
qualitative content analysis of archival documents, conducted
through the theoretical lens of a cultural sociology of immigration
policy, reveals that bureaucrats’ interpretations of immigration
files generated selection criteria emphasizing not just economic
utility, but also middle-class traits and values such as wealth
accumulation, educational attainment, entrepreneurial spirit,
resourcefulness, and a strong work ethic. By making "middle-class
multiculturalism" a demographic reality and basis of
nation-building in Canada, these state actors created a
much-admired approach to managing racial diversity that has
nevertheless generated significant social inequalities.
In the 1950s and 1960s, immigration bureaucrats in the Department
of Citizenship and Immigration played an important yet
unacknowledged role in transforming Canada's immigration policy. In
response to external economic and political pressures for change,
high-level bureaucrats developed new admissions criteria gradually
and experimentally while personally processing thousands of
individual immigration cases per year. Making Middle-Class
Multiculturalism shows how bureaucrats' perceptions and judgements
about the admissibility of individuals - in socioeconomic, racial,
and moral terms - influenced the creation of formal admissions
criteria for skilled workers and family immigrants that continue to
shape immigration to Canada. A qualitative content analysis of
archival documents, conducted through the theoretical lens of a
cultural sociology of immigration policy, reveals that bureaucrats'
interpretations of immigration files generated selection criteria
emphasizing not just economic utility, but also middle-class traits
and values such as wealth accumulation, educational attainment,
entrepreneurial spirit, resourcefulness, and a strong work ethic.
By making "middle-class multiculturalism" a demographic reality and
basis of nation-building in Canada, these state actors created a
much-admired approach to managing racial diversity that has
nevertheless generated significant social inequalities.
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