In becoming host communities for Francophone immigrants in the early 2000s, Canada's Francophone minority communities (FMCs) are facing the test of moving away from a predominant ethnic nationalism to an inclusive civic nationalism. The reception and integration of Black and Francophone immigrants is therefore a relevant indicator of the success of this test.Drawing on critical race theory and bricolage methodology, we reconstruct the ambiguous relationship between FMCs and their Black francophone immigrants who are both invited into French society and discriminated against.
RésuméEn devenant des communautés d'accueil d'immigrants francophones au début des années 2000, les communautés francophones en situation minoritaire du Canada (CFSM) sont confrontées à l'épreuve de l'abandon d'un nationalisme ethnique prédominant au profit d'un nationalisme civique inclusif. L'accueil