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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Tables and Figures xi
- Abbreviations xiii
- Acknowledgments xvii
- Foreword xix
- Introduction: In/to Canada 1
-
Section one. Situating Forced Migration in Canada
- 1 Migrants in Their Own Territory: Indigenous Displacement and Settler Colonialism in Canada 19
- 2 “Sold for a Slave for Life”: Black Enslavement in Colonial Canada 32
- 3 Selectivity, Crisis, and “Loopholes”: A Critical Geography of Canada’s Bordering of Refuge 44
- 4 Labels, Discourse, and Meaning-Making 58
- 5 Theorizing Forced Migration and the Purpose of International Protection 72
- 6 Reflecting on Ethics in Forced Migration Art and Research 89
- 7 Forced Migration into Canada from a Global Perspective 103
- 8 Canada’s Legal and Policy Framework for Migration 117
- 9 Key Actors in Forced Migration Management and Response in Canada 128
- 10 Federal-Provincial Relations and Refugee Policy in Canada 139
- 11 Human Trafficking in Canada: An Overview of an Invisible Crime 151
-
Section two. Intersectionalities of Forced Migration Experiences
- 12 (Re)Conceptualizing Gender and Sexuality: Current Understandings and Debates in Forced Migration Research and Policy in Canada 167
- 13 Forced Migration across the Life Course: Social Age, Chronological Age, and Family Status 181
- 14 (Dis)Ability and Medical Conditions in Canadian Refugee Resettlement 192
- 15 Making Race Central in Forced Migration Studies 204
- 16 Class Identity, Performance, and Practices in Refugee Selection and Integration in Canada 219
-
Section three “Becoming” and Un-becoming a Refugee in Canada
- 17 Refugee Protection in Canada: A Comparison of Resettlement and Inland Asylum Systems 235
- 18 Adding, Naming, Sustaining, and Spreading: Canada’s Private Sponsorship of Refugees Program 250
- 19 Negotiating Citizenship: Securing Permanence? 262
- 20 The Shifting Landscape of Statelessness in Canada 275
- 21 Immigration Detention in Canada: Concepts and Controversies 292
- 22 Fires and Floods: Examining Internal Climate Migration in Canada 304
-
Section four. Making Home and Place
- 23 From the Outside In: Decentring the Discussion of Refugee Integration in Canada 319
- 24 Canada’s Refugee Health-Care System and Its Humanitarian Undertow 334
- 25 The Right to Work: Rhetoric and Reality for Refugees in Canada 347
- 26 Religious Groups and Refugees in Canada: Advocacy, Partnership, and Resistance 359
- 27 Forced Migration and Education in Canada: Stories of Resistance, Resilience, and Reconciliation 372
- 28 Making Home in Canada: Housing and Forced Displacement 385
- Glossary 401
- References 415
- Contributors 547
- Index 557
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Tables and Figures xi
- Abbreviations xiii
- Acknowledgments xvii
- Foreword xix
- Introduction: In/to Canada 1
-
Section one. Situating Forced Migration in Canada
- 1 Migrants in Their Own Territory: Indigenous Displacement and Settler Colonialism in Canada 19
- 2 “Sold for a Slave for Life”: Black Enslavement in Colonial Canada 32
- 3 Selectivity, Crisis, and “Loopholes”: A Critical Geography of Canada’s Bordering of Refuge 44
- 4 Labels, Discourse, and Meaning-Making 58
- 5 Theorizing Forced Migration and the Purpose of International Protection 72
- 6 Reflecting on Ethics in Forced Migration Art and Research 89
- 7 Forced Migration into Canada from a Global Perspective 103
- 8 Canada’s Legal and Policy Framework for Migration 117
- 9 Key Actors in Forced Migration Management and Response in Canada 128
- 10 Federal-Provincial Relations and Refugee Policy in Canada 139
- 11 Human Trafficking in Canada: An Overview of an Invisible Crime 151
-
Section two. Intersectionalities of Forced Migration Experiences
- 12 (Re)Conceptualizing Gender and Sexuality: Current Understandings and Debates in Forced Migration Research and Policy in Canada 167
- 13 Forced Migration across the Life Course: Social Age, Chronological Age, and Family Status 181
- 14 (Dis)Ability and Medical Conditions in Canadian Refugee Resettlement 192
- 15 Making Race Central in Forced Migration Studies 204
- 16 Class Identity, Performance, and Practices in Refugee Selection and Integration in Canada 219
-
Section three “Becoming” and Un-becoming a Refugee in Canada
- 17 Refugee Protection in Canada: A Comparison of Resettlement and Inland Asylum Systems 235
- 18 Adding, Naming, Sustaining, and Spreading: Canada’s Private Sponsorship of Refugees Program 250
- 19 Negotiating Citizenship: Securing Permanence? 262
- 20 The Shifting Landscape of Statelessness in Canada 275
- 21 Immigration Detention in Canada: Concepts and Controversies 292
- 22 Fires and Floods: Examining Internal Climate Migration in Canada 304
-
Section four. Making Home and Place
- 23 From the Outside In: Decentring the Discussion of Refugee Integration in Canada 319
- 24 Canada’s Refugee Health-Care System and Its Humanitarian Undertow 334
- 25 The Right to Work: Rhetoric and Reality for Refugees in Canada 347
- 26 Religious Groups and Refugees in Canada: Advocacy, Partnership, and Resistance 359
- 27 Forced Migration and Education in Canada: Stories of Resistance, Resilience, and Reconciliation 372
- 28 Making Home in Canada: Housing and Forced Displacement 385
- Glossary 401
- References 415
- Contributors 547
- Index 557