Une alliance nationale visant à fournir une base factuelle pour l'établissement et l'intégration des nouveaux arrivants, ainsi que pour la promotion de communautés accueillantes au Canada
La revue de presse fournit des liens aux articles récents et archivés, à la fois en anglais et en français, sur l’immigration et la diversité lesquels ont été publiés dans les média locaux et nationaux. Il y a également des articles internationaux. Cette section est mise à jour hebdomadairement.
L’Actualité – Réfugiés syriens : le gouvernement fédéral a atteint la moitié de son objectif
Les organismes d’accueil de réfugiés syriens sont confrontés à des réalités qui les forcent à s’adapter — et à demander du temps pour reprendre leur souffle, dans certains cas. Ils ont été notamment pris de court par la taille des familles syriennes qui arrivent en sol canadien et par un nombre plus élevé que prévu de réfugiés ne parlant ni anglais […].
Radio-Canada – Vivre au Québec : pas si évident, même pour nos cousins français
Entre cousins tout est si simple!
Pas tant que çà, a constaté Élodie Danon en s’installant à Montréal en 2007. Croyant, comme plusieurs, que la vie ne serait qu’un copié-collé de sa réalité lyonnaise, elle réalise vite que les francophones d’Amérique sont fondamentalement différents. Les repères ne sont pas les mêmes, la culture est tout autre, la façon d’aborder le marché du travail […].
Montreal Gazette – Only 22 Government-Sponsored Syrian Refugees have Arrived in Montreal since December
While Vancouver and Ottawa are scrambling to find housing for all their government-sponsored Syrian refugees, Montreal has been strangely underwhelmed, with only 31 having arrived since Jan. 1, 2015 (22 since Dec. 1). Of course thousands of privately-sponsored Syrian refugees have arrived in Quebec — 2,947 to be exact — with more than 2,800 settling in Montreal and Laval. But left scratching their heads are the people who gave up their holidays to welcome what they thought would be hundreds of government-assisted refugees (GARs) from the Middle East — a flood that turned into a trickle.
Windsor Star – University of Windsor Opens Centre for International Students
International students hoping to brush up on their english proficiency skills have a new welcoming portal. University of Windsor’s Vanier Hall, previously a catering facility dedicated to Claire and Anne Winterbottom, has been completely transformed. The WinClare annex will be a Centre for English Language Development and contains four state-of-the-art classrooms, office space and student lounge. “This is a new home for our English training programs,” said Alan Wildeman, president of the University of Windsor. “Those are programs that attract students from all around the world as a first step toward becoming a student at the university. We have students from more than 50 countries that come and study English here.”
CBC – Federal Immigration Minister Apologizes to Sask. Over Refugee Remark
The federal minister responsible for refugees spoke in error Wednesday about the situation in Saskatchewan where provincial officials say things are going smoothly. In Toronto on Wednesday morning the federal immigration minister addressed questions about how some communities, including Toronto and Halifax, were asking for a temporary delay on the arrival of new refugees. John McCallum noted there were parts of the country that were “crying out for more refugees.” “New Brunswick, Quebec, Saskatchewan — those are places that really can use the refugees,” McCallum said. His statement, however, caught Saskatchewan’s minister responsible for immigration a bit off guard.
Reuters Canada – Brussels Urges More Migration within EU as Britain Resists
The EU urged Europeans on Thursday to cross borders to find work as the labor commissioner voiced “frustration” that British Prime Minister David Cameron’s push to curb EU migration has held up plans to make this easier. “Mobility in itself is an asset for Europe,” Marianne Thyssen told reporters as she presented an annual report on the labor market, showing migration within the bloc could hasten slow declines in the EU’s 9.1-percent unemployment rate.