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Canadian diaspora

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
People from Canada who reside outside of Canada
Map of the Canadian diaspora in the world (might include people with Canadian citizenship and children of Canadians).
  Canada
  + 100,000
  + 10,000
  + 1,000

TheCanadian diaspora is the group ofCanadians living outside the borders of Canada. As of a 2010 report by theAsia Pacific Foundation of Canada and TheCanadian Expat Association, there were 2.8 million Canadian citizens abroad (plus an unknown number of former citizens and descendants of citizens). For comparison, that is a larger population than six of the ten Canadian provinces. More than 9% of all Canadian citizens live outside of Canada. That compares to 1.7% of Americans, 2.6% of Chinese citizens, 3.3% of French citizens, 4.3% of Australians, 9% of British citizens, and 21.9% of New Zealanders.[1]

In past decades, most Canadians leaving the country have moved to theUnited States. In the 1980s,Los Angeles had the fourth largest Canadian population of any city in North America, withNew York close behind. Other countries and cities have emerged as major sites of Canadian settlement, notablyHong Kong,London,Beirut,Sydney,Paris, andDubai. The population in New York experienced continued growth in the 2000s, doubling between 2000 and 2008 to 21,000, representing the eighth largest foreign-born group in the Borough of Manhattan.[2]

A 2008 report by theUrban Institute estimated that "65,000 and 75,000 undocumented Canadians currently live in the United States."[2]

The largest Canadian populations abroad by country are:[3]

Country or TerritoryCanadian citizensSource
United States1,062,640Coulombe and DeVoretz, 2009
Hong Kong300,000Zhang and DeGolyer, 2011
France90,000foreign-born Canadians in France according to 2018 estimates
United Kingdom87,000foreign-born groups in the UK according to 2015 ONS estimates
Lebanon45,000DFAIT
United Arab Emirates40,000Montreal Gazette, 2007[4]
Pakistan30,000-50,000Canadian High Commissioner, 2019[5]
Australia27,289Dumont and Lemaitre, 2005
Germany25,000Destatis Bundesamt Germany 2021
China19,990Chinese Census 2010
South Korea14,210OECD, International Migration Database, 2008
Mexico12,439Canadian-born immigrants, 2020 Mexican Census[6]
Japan11,016OECD, International Migration Database, 2008
Egypt10,000DFAIT
New Zealand7,770Dumont and Lemaitre, 2005
Philippines7,500DFAIT
Qatar7,250bq magazine, 2014[7]
Haiti6,000DFAIT
Switzerland5,243OECD, International Migration Database, 2008
Singapore5,140Foreign Ministry of Singapore
Thailand5,000DFAIT
Trinidad & Tobago5,000Parasram, 2009
Belgium4,145Dumont and Lemaitre, 2005
Finland2,1062019 UN migrant stock
Iceland35Alþingi Foreign Census 2017

Citizens born in Canada make up about 58% of the diaspora, the other 42% being people born outside Canada who became naturalized as Canadian citizens and then moved out again, often back to their country of origin, or sometimes to a third country. Native-born Canadians had an exit rate of about 1.33% over ten years from 1996 to 2006, compared to 4.5% for naturalized Canadians. Most Canadians in the United States are native-born, while most Canadians in Hong Kong are naturalized Canadians who were born in Hong Kong.[1]

For native-born Canadians, the United States is the primary destination, and the emigration rate varies substantially by ethnicity. It is especially high among Middle Eastern, Eastern European, and South Asian Canadians, indicating that the English-speaking and well-educatedchildren of immigrants are often highly mobile. French Canadians have the highest rate of return to Canada at 29%. Among naturalized Canadians, exit rates vary by country of origin, being highest among Canadians from typically highly developed countries (Hong Kong, United States, Taiwan, France). Exit rates among Canada's two largest immigrant populations, Mainland Chinese and Indians, were very low during 1996 to 2006 but have risen.

British Columbians are particularly likely to go overseas, more than twice as likely as an Ontarian, and five times more likely as a Quebecer, according to a 2007 survey byThe Vancouver Sun. Many of these areHong Kong returnees; the so-called "astronauts" or "yacht people" who moved to Vancouver from Hong Kong in the 1980s and 90s, but later returned. However, two-thirds of Canadians overseas (in 2007) were Canadian-born, outnumbering returning immigrants.[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abCanadians Abroad, p 4
  2. ^ab"Canadians Among Us!".The New York Observer. July 31, 2008.
  3. ^Canadians Abroad, p 12.
  4. ^"Canada may limit services for dual citizens".gulfnews.com.
  5. ^Hasan, Shazia (2019-08-20)."HC highlights growing ties between Canada, Pakistan".DAWN.COM. Retrieved2020-04-30.
  6. ^"Censo de Población y Vivienda 2020".INEGI (in Spanish).Archived from the original on 30 May 2023. Retrieved17 April 2021.
  7. ^"Population of Qatar". Archived from the original on 2013-12-22. Retrieved2016-11-07.
  8. ^"The Canadian Diaspora". Archived fromthe original on 2015-11-08. Retrieved2012-01-20.
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