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Open AccessJournal Article

Immigrants in Prairie Cities: Ethnic Diversity in Twentieth-Century Canada

Peter Ludlow
- 01 Jul 2011 - 
- Vol. 24, Iss: 2, pp 262
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This article is published in British Journal of Canadian Studies.The article was published on 2011-07-01 and is currently open access. It has received 8 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Cultural diversity.

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Transnationalizing Home in Winnipeg: Refugees' Stories of the Places Between the "Here-and-There"

TL;DR: The authors argue that refugees are continually engaged in the process of making home, not only in the sending and receiving countries, but also in countries along their often complex and long migration routes, and describe how three refugees who were forcibly displaced from their homelands talk about their original homes, their attempts to re-make home in different locations, and their understanding of home in Canada.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring the Welcoming Capacities of Host Urban and Rural Communities

TL;DR: The authors investigated how responses to individual questions vary between the identified subpopulations of interest and made distinctions as to how the responses of these sub-populations vary between urban and rural settings.

The Women's Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa: Constructing Public Memory and Preserving History in a Changing City, 1898-1932

Connie Gunn
TL;DR: This paper examined the membership and work of the Women's Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa from 1898 to 1932 and found that women participated in the construction of a nationalist and imperialist collective memory, celebrating connections to the British Empire, a mythologized settler past, and Ottawa's evolution from lumber town to national capital.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Transnationalizing Home in Winnipeg: Refugees' Stories of the Places Between the "Here-and-There"

TL;DR: The authors argue that refugees are continually engaged in the process of making home, not only in the sending and receiving countries, but also in countries along their often complex and long migration routes, and describe how three refugees who were forcibly displaced from their homelands talk about their original homes, their attempts to re-make home in different locations, and their understanding of home in Canada.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring the Welcoming Capacities of Host Urban and Rural Communities

TL;DR: The authors investigated how responses to individual questions vary between the identified subpopulations of interest and made distinctions as to how the responses of these sub-populations vary between urban and rural settings.

The Women's Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa: Constructing Public Memory and Preserving History in a Changing City, 1898-1932

Connie Gunn
TL;DR: This paper examined the membership and work of the Women's Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa from 1898 to 1932 and found that women participated in the construction of a nationalist and imperialist collective memory, celebrating connections to the British Empire, a mythologized settler past, and Ottawa's evolution from lumber town to national capital.