Procedural precarity: An examination of Canadian immigration policy and practice in relation to immigrant youth
Procedural precarity: An examination of Canadian immigration policy and practice in relation to immigrant youth
Date
2020
Authors
Weizman, Aviva
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus of Human Rights
Abstract
All newcomers, regardless of age, face a compounded variety of
barriers, risks and challenges that are exacerbated by their immigrant status.
However, newcomer youths face some of these same issues with heightened
vulnerability, often with a lower level of visibility or opportunity to reap the
benefits bestowed by immigration policies or federally-funded programming.
The Centre for Newcomers, an immigrant-serving organisation that has
for more than 30 years been providing services to Calgarian newcomers,
has identified several substantial gaps within these parameters. This article
explores some of the most pressing gaps in Canadian immigration policy
in relation to the following inter-connected and fundamental issues facing
newcomer youth in Canada: protracted and ongoing status issues; educational
barriers; and poverty. The article then contextualises these policy gaps with
reference to CFN’s Real Me programme, which has recently been recognised as
a best practice by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, to provide
evidence- and practice-based policy recommendations.
Description
Keywords
Canada,
youth,
immigration,
education
Citation
A Weizman ‘Procedural precarity: An examination of Canadian immigration policy and practice in relation to immigrant youth’ (2020) 4 Global Campus Human Rights Journal 48-67
http://dx.doi.org/10.25330/607