Title: Race and Ethnicity
1Race and Ethnicity
- Definition and Application
2The Social Roots of Racism
- Physical markers are used to distinguish groups
and create inequality based on race. - Different social conditions among superordinates
and subordinates create behavioral differences
between them. -
3The Social Roots of Racism
- Perceptions of behavioral differences get
embedded in culture as racial stereotypes. - Racial stereotypes reinforce the use of physical
markers to distinguish groups.
4Key Questions
- What constitutes an ethnic group?
- How do we define, identify and locate an ethnic
group? - What is the significance of ethnicity in
Canadian society?
5Ethnic groups
- Ethnic groups can be identified by their cultural
distinctiveness. - There is general agreement that culture is the
principally identifiable characteristic
6Culture Defined
- Systems of ideals and ideas,
- Ways of thinking
- Plans or recipes for behaving in any group of
people, - Passed down from generation to generation."
7Minority Status
- Ethnic groups are often referred to as cultural
minorities.
8Minority situation
- Integration and Suicide
- Durkhiem, for example, noted that when a group is
in a minority situation the elements of group
life become more pronounced. Less chance of
Suicide
9Cultural Bonds
- Some common bonds that unify ethnic groups
include - Language, religion, folkways and mores, styles of
dress, foods,occupational specialization, social
values, aesthetic standards
10Theodorson and Theodorson1975
- Modern Dictionary of Sociology define ethnicity
as a group with- - 1. A common culture
- 2. A sense of identity which exists as a sub-
group in a larger society. - 3. Differential of cultural characteristics
from members of the host society. -
11What is an ethnic identity
- A. An ethnic group shares a common ancestry
- B. An ethnic group shares common norms,
values and traditions (insiders) - C. An ethnic group is considered to be a
group by those who do not share the first two
elements (outsiders)
12 Heterogenious/Homogenious Contexts
- Ethnicity then becomes more significant in North
America than Europe. Why? - Because in Europe, ethnicity is usually not a
sub-group of the larger society.
13- Nation and ethnicity are less differentiated in a
culturally homogeneous societies. - Ie. French in France, Italian in Italy
14Prejudice
- Prejudice refers to an unsubstantiated negative
prejudgement of individuals or groups because of
their ETHNICITY, race or RELIGION
15Discrimination
- Discrimination is the exclusion of individuals or
groups from full participation in society because
of their ethnicity, race or religion - Prejudice (an attitude) and discrimination
(behaviour) are usually linked, but they are
distinct phenomena.
16Forms of Discrimination in Canada
- Overt, Structural and Covert
171. Blatant or Overt-
-
- To arbitrarily deny opportunities to members of
ethnic groups whose qualifications are equal to
members of the dominant group.
182. Structural Discrimination
- The impersonal perhaps unintentional
operation of the Canadian social system. -
- Unequal reward and opportunities
19 3. Legislative discrimination
- -Phased out after WW2 I.e Internment camps
- Yet until mid 1960's, some of Canadian
immigration laws were racist. - E.g. policies regarding aboriginal peoples have
historically been paternalistic.
204. Cultural Discrimination -
- Operates through the expectations of the dominant
culture and its attempts at conformity in public
life.
21Cultural Discrimination
- Those groups whose attributes (symbols,
artificates, cultural practices) that deviate
most markedly from the dominant group are the
most severely discriminated against
22Cultural Discrimination
- Ethnic groups that approximate the dominant
ethno-cultural model in appearance, religion,
lifestyle symbols etc. the more open and
accessible are the institutions of society.
23Myths About Immigrants
- Taking over the country
- Uneducated
- Stealing Jobs
- Uncultured
- Not to be trusted
24South/Asians Toronto
- -Immigrants from South/Asia are taking over the
country. - -people from Asia -East Indian, Pakistan, China,
Korea ect. are overrunning the country pretty
soon there will be no white folk. - Xenophobia
25Xenophobia
- Xenophobia is a fear or contempt of that which is
foreign or unknown, especially of strangers or
foreign people. - The term is typically used to describe a fear or
dislike of foreigners or of people significantly
different from oneself.
26Myths
- -Immigrants are uneducated- NO- immigrants are
more likely than non-immigrants to have a
university education.
27Daniel Bell 1975
- Canada is one and at same time
- Uni-cultural
- Bi-cultural
- Multicultural
28Canada
- Multidimensional in terms of ethnic patterns
- Uni-cultural-British, Anglo Saxon Dominance 1763
- Bicultural-French and English Charter groups
1963-1968 - Multicultural-since 1972 Official..
29Canadian Uniculturalism
- Canada was never a melting pot Anglo Dominance
combined with racism and nativism. - Postwar immigration, however, went far to change
this.
30BR and Fr. Origins
- Of this population of about 22.4 million, nearly
one-half (46), or about 10.3 million, reported
only British Isles, French and/or Canadian ethnic
or cultural origins.
31British ancestry.
- The largest proportion - 21 of the total
population aged 15 years and older - was
comprised of those of only British ancestry.
32Other Europeans.
- The next largest proportion of Canada's
population was comprised of the descendants of
other Europeans. - About 4.3 million people, or about one-fifth
(19) of those aged 15 and over, had only
European ancestry (other than British and French
origins).
33Non-European descent
- People of non-European descent accounted for 13
of the population aged 15 and over,
or 2.9 million.
34Mixed ethnic heritages
- In addition, 22 of the population aged 15 and
over, or 4.9 million, reported other mixed ethnic
heritages, or did not know their ethnic ancestry.
35Canada Ethnic History in Brief
- Contact 1608-1763
- 350,000 Natives vs. 5000 Europeans
- Wilderness, Fur Trade
- Champlain, ie. Penetang
- Some trade, much claiming
36Pre-ConfederationTwo Solitudes
- Plains of Abraham
- La Survivance
- Upper Canada 55 English and 35 French. Lower
Canada 85 French 15 English.
37Post-Confederation/Western Settlement
- 1867-1939
- Anglo-centric Orange Order predominant.
- Influx of Russian, Ukranian, Chinese
- Chinese, Italian, Jewish in urban centers
- prejudice and discrimination
38Post World War Two
- Restrictions lifted
- More Italian, Jewish, Greek, Northern European
- Italians 731,000, Germans 1.3 million, 385,000
Scand. - Diversity in Population/Conformity and
Assimilation govt policy
39Establishing the Mosaic
- 1960s
- Introduction of the Points System
- Immigration less Anglo-centric
- Bi Bi Commission, Multicultural Official in
1972.
40Refocusing current
- Refocusing the Cultural Mosaic
- Three levels of immigration -points, family
reunification, refugee status - Increasing numbers of visible minorities South
Asia, Caribbean and Asia - 250,000 immigrants per year
41Immigration
- Immigration is an important way of attempting to
understand majority/minority relations in a
country.
42Anthony Richmond
- Enhanced by the increasing amount of immigrants
since WW2 (Richmond,1982) - Canada has been described as a salad bowl
- Immigrants are working hard to carve out their
place... -
43Acculturation not assimilation
- .To adjust to Canada's two dominate groups.
French and English. - These groups serve as reference groups to many
immigrant groups.
44Assimilation and Acculturation
- The two ends of the continuum of what happens to
ethnic groups are - . Assimilation
- 2. Acculturation
- 3 ... Maintenance of group identity and cohesion
within the larger society. (ethnic ghetto)
45Vertical Mosaic
- John Porter (1965) -Uniculturalism
- A controversial thesis-Canadas emphasis on
cultural pluralism hinders minority groups - Creates ethnic ghetto cultures restricting
mobility - A functionalist thesis
46Revisionists
- Include Peter S. Li
- Gordon Darroch
- Ethnic communities carve out their own
occupational avenues for success. - Canada is primarily a class society-Marxist
thesis.
47Subtle discrimination
- Examples of this subtle discrimination included
being passed over for promotion, assigned
unpleasant tasks, being stereotyped, and being
excluded from the "inner circle" of the workplace
48Evelyn Kallen (1974)
- KALLEN, Evelyn and KELNER, Merrijoy. 1983.
Ethnicity, Opportunity ..... Toronto Polite
Racism and Marshmallow Politics, Currents
Readings in Race ...
49Polite Racism
- Visible minority men and women still face
"polite" racism when job hunting.
50Covert Racism
- Racism is more covert today- US and Canada.
- Focus group participants said that racism is a
"hidden thing" in the workplace, and many were
convinced that they had been victims of subtle
forms of racism.
51Subtle discrimination
- Examples included
- Passed over for promotion,
- Assigned unpleasant tasks,
- Being stereotyped,
- Being excluded from the "inner circle" of the
workplace
52Polite racists.
- They maintain a number of fixed ideas about
people, usually based on some insufficient or
erroneous information such as Asians are passive,
Chinese are bad drivers, Jews are Greedy, Native
people are lazy.
53Polite racists. (Kallen, 1974)
- A study conducted in 1978 showed that people are
16 somewhat racist and 33 percent somewhat
racist. 51 percent of management in 199 large
companies (N50) held negative views of people of
colour. (Henry and Ginsberg, 1978)
54Trudeau claimed in 1971
-
- Although there are two official languages,
there is no official culture." - Since 1971, 200 million dollars has been spent
promoting multicultural ideals, social
integration and racial harmony
55Trudeau Quote
- "There cannot be one policy for Canadians of
British origin or French origins, another for
originals and yet a third for all others. (1971)
56R.C.B.B. 1963-1969
- The Royal Commission on Bi-lingualism and
Bi-culturalism revealed the growth of a new
current in Canada by the other Canadians'. - Multicultural Act-an afterthought?
57(No Transcript)
58Visible minority men and women still face
"polite" racism when job hunting. One focus group
participant said "I've called about jobs and had
people say 'come down for an interview,' yet when
I get there, I get the feeling they are surprised
to see that I'm black because I sound like the
average guy on the telephone. They've said 'Oh,
the job has just been filled,' or during the
interview they'll say that I'm overqualified or
ask me questions like 'Are you sure you want to
work at this type of job?' Ethnic Origin In
Canada1991
-
- Ethnic Origin Total Responses Percentage
- Canadian 8,806,275
30.9 - English 6,832,095
23.9 - French 5,597,845
19.6 - Scottish 4,260,840
14.9 - Irish 4,260, 840
13.2 - German 2,757,140
9.7 - Iitalian 1,207,475
4.2 - Aboriginal 1,101,955 3.9
- Ukrainian 1,026,475 3.6
- Chinese 921,585
3.2 - Dutch 916,215
3.2 - Polish 786,735
2.8 - South Asian 723,345 2.5
- Jewish 351,705
1.2 - Jamaican 188,770
0.7
59Assimilation vs. Cultural Distinctiveness
- The two ends of the continuum of what happens to
ethnic groups are -
- 1. Assimilation
-
- 2. Maintenance of group identity and
cohesion within the - larger society.
-
-
60The cultural pluralist
- Today we will look at some theoretical concepts
that relate to the struggle of cultural pluralism
- Many immigrants who favour maintenance of their
own identity have no desire to adopt the
lifestyle of the host country. -
61Reference Groups-assimilation vs. distinctiveness
- Very often they view the host country in terms of
expediency and look forward to making money and
going home. - With these groups, the reference group is drawn
from their own ethnic history and not from the
dominant culture. - Immigrant groups who favour assimilation, on the
other hand, look to the host or dominant culture
as reference groups.
62Minorities in Transition
- The culture of a minority group in transition is
referred to as a hybrid culture. -
- Containing norms that are traditional as well as
some values of the dominant culture.
63Canadian Family
- The Canadian Family in an Urban Setting
-
- Elkin (1964) suggests that there is not one
Canadian Family. - It is too heterogeneous, with its diverse ethnic
religious and occupational groupings. -
64Italian Family
- In Italy, the family is a source of moral
authority and community values. - A person's worth is determined by his/her ability
to promote the economic prosperity of the family
and to preserve the chastity of women in the
family. -
65 Italian Canadians in Toronto
- The first handful arrived in the 1880's and
1890's settling in the Ward area bounded by Young
and University college and Queen they lived in
ramschackled housing. - They were often a transient group working for the
railway or mining in Ontario bush.
66Formative Stage
- Numbers grew as they formed networks for incoming
Italians to pass on information about housing,
and financial aid in case of sickness and death. - Population-
- The numbers were about 14,000 in 1913.
-
67Maintenance Stage
- During the Second World War about 500 were
rounded up and interned in Toronto. Times were
very difficult for the Italian community until
following the war when the "enemy alien"
designation had been lifted in 1947. - Throughout the Second World War many Italians
were inturned and lost their posessions. -
68- In the 1950's the Italian community began to grow
such that protests by unionists, politicians and
the general public were made to stem the tide of
immigration. -
- Through the 1960's the Italian community was
largely responsible for building the
infra-structure of Toronto.
69- As a result, the group has moved northward to
suburbs like North York. The star claims that "
more recent neighbourhoods of choice in bedroom
communities like Woodbridge "symbolize a
collective distancing from there humble
beginnings". -
70Italians Now Urban
- The majority of Italian Canadians are found in
urban centres like Toronto and Montreal. The
small number of works on Italians are
contradictory. -
- On the one hand, Jansen(1971) found that Italian
immigrants in Toronto were ocupationally,
residentially and linguistically segregated and
had minumal contacts beyond their primary groups. - Similar patterns were reported by Boissevain
(1976)
71Socialization
- The contradictions may be partly the product of
differential socialization practices between
Italian males and females. - There "stricter, more protective practices
towards females." -
- It is also reported that first generation
Italians have unrealistically high expectations
for their children which often leads to conflict.
- Sturino reports that gradually Italians will see
a blending of old and new family patterns. -
72Familiaria
- "At three levels of kinship of nuclear family,
family circle, and kindred, elements from a
peasant past were merged with an urban present.
The kinship patterns can neither be referred to
as Canadian nor Italian". -
- Sturino sees the emergence of an entirely new
family form which represents a departure from
concepts used to describe some other ethnic
groups like stability and change.
73Institutional Completeness
- The circumstances for Italians in Montreal have
been very different from those of the Jewish
community. - Large scale immigration for Italians took place
following WW2. -
- Second only to British as a minority in the
province. - Despite some institutional completeness there has
been some question of the cohesiveness of
Italians in that city. -
- Scholars like Clifford Jansen and Bossovian have
found that Italians are "individualistic members
of some future Italian community" They are
unwilling to participate in or contribute
financially towards community organizations. -
-
- Italians are a distinctive community but they are
not held together through formal organization. -
- Italians focus their ethnicity on kinship,
neighbourhood, work and residence. -
- Because of this focus there is more chance for
intergroup conflicts among Italians. -
- Notably absent from the Italian community are
voluntary associations aimed at immigrant
adjustment. -
- Just as the Jewish organizational style tends
towards formal institutions the Italian is
informal.
74- Ukrainian Canadians
-
-
- Hobart examined attitudes towards family size,
marital roles, and childbearing among a sample of
three generations in Edmonton and surrounding
rural communties. -
- The pattern of the first generation closely
reflects the native country while the third
generation closely approximates the ideal typical
English-Canadian family small in size, maternal
employment, egalitarianism in marital and
parent/child relationships, values supportive of
divorce and intermarriage and weak kinship
orientations. -
-
- However, since concrete data on first generation
Ukranians is scarce, intergenerational
comparisons are problematic and speculative. -
- Ukrainians-A Third Force
-
- -Paul Yuzyk in 1964 in his maiden speech to the
Canadian Senate spoke of the emergence of a third
force in Canadian society. -
- -the third force he was referring to was the
other minority groups that were emerging in
Canada. -
- -the Royal Commission on Bi-lingualism and
Bi-culturalism revealed the growth of a new
current in Canada by the other Canadians'. -
- -Canada by the 1960's, was becoming a
multi-cultural society.
75Myths
- -Immigrants come over and sap the welfare system.
NOT. Immigrants are only slightly less likely
to participate in the labour force 76.4 compared
to 77.7. - -However, among young people-able
bodied-immigrants had a higher labour force
participation rate at 95.3 compared to 94.8
among non-immigrants. - Immigrant men earn more than non-immigrant men
although the same is not true for women. -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Lecture 5 Canadian Immigration Policy
-
-
- Immigration is an important way of attempting to
understand majority/minority relations in a
country. -
- Herberg distinguishes seven periods in Canadian
immigration. -
76 Visible minority men and women still face
"polite" racism when job hunting. One focus group
participant said "I've called about jobs and had
people say 'come down for an interview,' yet when
I get there, I get the feeling they are surprised
to see that I'm black because I sound like the
average guy on the telephone. They've said 'Oh,
the job has just been filled,' or during the
interview they'll say that I'm overqualified or
ask me questions like 'Are you sure you want to
work at this type of job?' Ethnic Origin In
Canada1991
-
- Ethnic Origin Total Responses Percentage
- Canadian 8,806,275
30.9 - English 6,832,095
23.9 - French 5,597,845
19.6 - Scottish 4,260,840
14.9 - Irish 4,260, 840
13.2 - German 2,757,140
9.7 - Iitalian 1,207,475
4.2 - Aboriginal 1,101,955 3.9
- Ukrainian 1,026,475 3.6
- Chinese 921,585
3.2 - Dutch 916,215
3.2 - Polish 786,735
2.8 - South Asian 723,345 2.5
- Jewish 351,705
1.2 - Jamaican 188,770
0.7