2015
DOI: 10.1007/s12134-015-0467-4
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Branding ‘Canadian Experience’ in Immigration Policy: Nation Building in a Neoliberal Era

Abstract: This paper examines the branding of 'Canadian experience' in Canadian immigration policy as a rhetorical strategy for neoliberal nation-building. Since 2008, the Canadian government has introduced an unprecedented number of changes to immigration policy. While the bulk of these policies produce more temporary and precarious forms of migration, the Canadian government has mobilized the rhetoric of 'Canadian experience' as a means to identify immigrants who carry the promise of economic and social integration. T… Show more

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Cited by 59 publications
(60 citation statements)
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“…In academia, research on international university students has focused primarily on their mobilities (Cairns, 2015;Finn, 2017;Perkins & Neumayer, 2014;Tan & Hugo, 2017) and the integration of international students into the economy, whether through invitation into permanent residency for work or the mistreatment of students in under-the table, or irregular, revenue streams or having to work longer hours than permitted, which puts them at risk (Bhuyan, Jeyapal, Ku, Sakamoto, & Chou, 2017;Johnstone & Lee, 2017;Nyland et al, 2009). What both of these streams on international student research have in common is the need to examine more critically the varying experiences of students in the post-secondary sector that are affected by class, race and gender (Perkins & Neumayer, 2014;Sweetman & Warman, 2014;Waters, 2012).…”
Section: Context and Justificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In academia, research on international university students has focused primarily on their mobilities (Cairns, 2015;Finn, 2017;Perkins & Neumayer, 2014;Tan & Hugo, 2017) and the integration of international students into the economy, whether through invitation into permanent residency for work or the mistreatment of students in under-the table, or irregular, revenue streams or having to work longer hours than permitted, which puts them at risk (Bhuyan, Jeyapal, Ku, Sakamoto, & Chou, 2017;Johnstone & Lee, 2017;Nyland et al, 2009). What both of these streams on international student research have in common is the need to examine more critically the varying experiences of students in the post-secondary sector that are affected by class, race and gender (Perkins & Neumayer, 2014;Sweetman & Warman, 2014;Waters, 2012).…”
Section: Context and Justificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These additional costs are related to public education, healthcare and other such investments and rights of citizens, that international students would not have had access to, or used growing up in a different country (Johnstone & Lee, 2017). There has even been the creation of specific immigration programs as incentive to attract foreign students such as the Canadian Experience Class in 2008 (Bhuyan et al, 2017;Johnstone & Lee, 2017), the Federal Skilled Workers Program in 2013 that provided a fast track option of PhD candidates to obtain citizenship, and the Provincial Nominees Program, also in 2013, that provides the opportunity for international graduate students, among other skilled migrants, to be nominated by their province for citizenship and employment (Johnstone & Lee, 2017). These programs make it easier for foreign students to become part of the society but primarily in an economic capacity, and not necessarily in a fully permanent way, with some exceptions.…”
Section: Neoliberal Immigration Policy: the Economic Benefit Of Intermentioning
confidence: 99%
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