2021
DOI: 10.3138/ijcs.58.x.54
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“We Can’t Be Too Selective about This”: Immigration Advocacy in the Canadian English-Language Press, 1949–57

Abstract: Immigration policy during the immediate years after the Second World War highly restricted the arrival of newcomers. Before 1947, Canada’s immigration system was a preferential one, with the highest priority given to British subjects coming to Canada from the United Kingdom, or from any of the British dominions, and the United States. Canada’s preferences then extended to Northern Europeans, then to Central and Southern Europeans. Chinese, Greeks, Italians, Portuguese, and Spanish immigrants were excluded. Dur… Show more

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