Recruitment and Retention of Bilingual Health and Social Service Professionals in Francophone Minority Communities in Winnipeg and Ottawa

2018 ◽  
pp. 209-232
Author(s):  
Sébastien Savard ◽  
Josée Benoît ◽  
Halimatou Ba ◽  
Faïçal Zellama ◽  
Florette Giasson ◽  
...  
2012 ◽  
pp. 214-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rémi Léger

On 11 June 2010, ten leading scholars came together at the invitation of the Canadian Institute for Research on Linguistic Minorities to discuss the autonomy and recognition of Canada’s official language minority communities. In this article, I examine the implications of this workshop for Francophone minority community institutions by emphasizing and contextualizing main ideas and expanding on key proposals. First, I map out and explain how the implementation of horizontal management has increasingly curtailed community autonomy. Next, I catalog and discuss participants’ proposals for fostering greater autonomy for Francophone minority communities. Last, I sketch the potential and limitations of horizontal management.


2006 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 427-428
Author(s):  
Troy Riddell

Canada's Francophone Minority Communities: Constitutional Renewal and the Winning of School Governance, Michael D. Behiels, Montreal and Kingston: McGill Queen's University Press, 2004, pp. 442.Michael Behiels straightforwardly sets out the purpose of his book in the very first sentence: “This study is a descriptive analysis of Canada's francophone minority communities' quest for renewal and regeneration through constitutional reform and the winning of school governance” (xxi). Behiels bases his study on archived material from a number of francophone groups, government documents, court decisions, interviews with five francophone activists, and a large number of secondary sources.


2006 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 694-695
Author(s):  
Troy Riddell

Canada's Francophone Minority Communities: Constitutional Renewal and the Winning of School Governance, Michael D. Behiels, Montreal and Kingston: McGill Queen's University Press, 2004, pp. xxx, 442.Michael Behiels very straightforwardly sets out the purpose of his book in the very first sentence: “This study is a descriptive analysis of Canada's francophone minority communities' quest for renewal and regeneration through constitutional reform and the winning of school governance” (xxi). Behiels bases his study on archived material from a number of francophone groups, government documents, court decisions, interviews with five francophone activists, and a large number of secondary sources.


1969 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mike Ponting

While phrases such as ‘Capitaine Crounche’ and ‘beurre d’arachide’ are familiar to, and easily taken for granted by, most English Canadians, who tend to encounter linguistic duality in their daily lives in a number of ways, the politics underlying such seemingly harmless words are significant. Indeed, no other issue has played as central a role in Canadian social and political development as has language, with French-English linguistic tensions and considerations affecting numerous aspects of Canadian life, including foreign policy, the awarding of government contracts and indeed, the labelling of food packaging. While much public and scholarly attention has been paid to the language issue and the francophone population of Québec, less has been paid to language and francophones outside of the main concentration of Canada’s French speakers. While geographically dispersed, and vastly outnumbered, Canada’s francophone minority communities and their identities are nevertheless an important part of the Canadian social fabric, as is evidenced by the amount of government attention these French Canadians1 receive. Two key developments in the collective identity of francophone minoritiesoccurred in 1969 and 1982, when the Official Languages Act (OLA), and the Canadian Charterof Rights and Freedoms were (respectively) promulgated, the latter including constitutionally entrenched language rights for official language minorities. In this essay, we will examine the vitality of francophone minority communities, and how language rights have impacted them and contributed to the maintenance of their identity. Specifically, we will argue that minority francophone communities are still strong and that language rights have reinforced these communities and their identities, and have made an important contribution to their survival and long-term vitality. It is hoped that gaining a more complete understanding of the impact of language rights on these groups will not only provide a fuller understanding of French Canadian identity, but also of identity in Canadian society in general.


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