An exploratory study of how multiculturalism policies are implemented at the grassroots level.
Yan, Miu Chung ; Chau, Shirley ; Sangha, Dave 等
Abstract
The concept of multiculturalism has become a fixture in Canadian
society as part of a nation-building mechanism. In many ways, this
suggests a perception that public policies promoting multiculturalism
are working. However, this perception is based on assumptions that there
is a coherent and shared definition and understanding of the
implementation of multiculturalism policies. This paper reports the
findings of an exploratory study that examined how multiculturalism
policies are actualized at the grassroots level through community
organizations. This study involved key informant interviews and focus
groups of government staff responsible for the delivery of
multiculturalism at the federal, provincial, and municipal levels, as
well as discussions with service users and service providers of
multiculturalism. Findings of this study show that, first, there is a
difference in the understanding of the meaning of the policies among
these research participants. Second, there has been a subtle shift of
governmental interpretation of multiculturalism policies to an
antiracist perspective. Third, although both federal and provincial
governments have positioned community organizations as key partners in
actualizing multiculturalism policies at the grassroots level, their
relationship has been strained, i.e., in order to attain their goals for
multiculturalism, community organizations have had to adapt to changing
rules and to learn how to maneuver through the funding process. Some
policy implications are suggested at the end of the paper.
Resume
Le concept du multiculturalisme fait partie integrante du mecanisme
de la reconstruction d'une nation au sein de la societe canadienne.
De plusieurs facons, cela suggere qu'une perception existe selon
laquelle les politiques des gouvernements ayant pour but de promouvoir
le multiculturalisme fonctionnent bien. Toutefois, cette perception se
base sur la premisse qu'il existe une definition et une
comprehension coherentes et partagees de la mise en oeuvre de politiques
qui gouvernent le multiculturalisme. Cet article presente le compte
rendu des donnees recueillies Iors d'une etude exploratoire de la
maniere dont les politiques gouvernant le multiculturalisme sont
actualisees au niveau fondamental par I'intermediaire
d'organismes communautaires. Cette etude presente aussi des
entretiens tenus avec certaines personnes-ressources cles ainsi
qu'avec un groupe de discussion forme de membres du personnel de la
fonction publique charges de la mise en oeuvre du multiculturalisme aux
niveaux federal, provincial et municipal, aussi bien qu'avec les
utilisateurs et fournisseurs de services relies au multiculturalisme.
Les donnees recueillies dans cette etude demontrent que, premierement,
il existe differents niveaux de comprehension de la signification des
politiques parmi les participants de ces recherches. Deuxiemement, il
existe dans I'interpretation faite par les gouvernements des
politiques du multiculturalisme, un transfert subtil vers une
perspective antiraciste. Troisiemement, bien que les gouvernements aient
vise certains organismes communautaires comme partenaires-cle dans
I'actualisation des politiques au niveau fondamental, la relation
entre les gouvernements et ces organismes demeure un peu etrange. De
pLus, a la fin de cet article, nous suggerons certaines implications des
politiques gouvernant le multiculturalisme.
INTRODUCTION
Canada's multiculturalism policy is being praised as the model
for many other countries that are struggling with the increasing
diversity of their demographic landscapes. Nonetheless, what is evident
in the literature is that the Canadian debate on the nature of
multiculturalism has always been contentious, and Canadians appear to
have a very diverse understanding of what the policy is actually about.
Moreover, there has been very little examination within the existing
literature about how this policy is actually implemented. This paper
reports the findings of a study on how both the federal and provincial
multiculturalism policies are implemented in British Columbia (BC).
There are many ways for these governments to implement the policies. Our
concern is particularly about the partnership between governments and
community organizations that have been portrayed as the
governments' official partners in implementing Canada's
multiculturalism policy. Based on the findings, we argue that the
ambiguous nature of the Canadian Multiculturalism Act has led to shifts
in the interpretation of the Act by the provincial government and
community organizations. The implementation of both the Canadian and BC
multiculturalism policies has also been compromised by shrinking funding
and the introduction of new funding processes, which together have
jeopardized the partnership between governments and community
organizations. As a result, the community infrastructure, which
governments need in order to realize the policy at the grassroots level,
has been weakened. Our findings raise questions about the commitment of
both the federal and provincial governments in actualizing these
policies at the grassroots level.
The Policy Context
The federal government of Canada has been actively promoting its
multiculturalism policies since the policy's inception in 1971. Its
commitment to multiculturalism as a public policy was further cemented
with the passage of legislation (the Canadian Multiculturalism Act 1985,
c. 24 [4th Supp.]) in 1985. Subsequently, many provincial governments
have developed their own multicultural policies. Indeed, the passage of
the Canadian Multiculturalism Act (CMA) also made Canada the first
country in the world to officially embrace diversity in its national
policies. As specified in the Preamble, this Act
recognizes the diversity of Canadians as regards face, national or
ethnic origin, colour, and religion as a fundamental characteristic
of Canadian society and is committed to a policy of
multiculturalism designed to preserve and enhance the multicultural
heritage of Canadians, while working to achieve the equality of all
Canadians in the economic, social, cultural, and political life of
Canada.
This Act, as Fleras and Elliot (2003, 287) suggest, offers "a
principle and a practice for engaging diversity as different yet
equal" in Canadian society.
Although the idea of "multiculturalism" is politically
loaded and contestable (Goldberg 1994; Gutman 1994), Canada's
multiculturalism policy has become a model for many other countries that
are facing similar challenges often associated with increasing
cultural/ethno/racial diversity due to unprecedented global human
movements. However, in the post-9/11 era, it has been observed that
multiculturalism in many European liberal states has actually been in
retreat. France, for example, has recently banned cultural and religious
dress in schools (Joppke 2004; Legrain 2007; Palumbo-Liu 2002). The
European debates on multiculturalism have also reignited controversies
regarding multiculturalism in Canada.
Perceived as a nation-building policy (Abu-Laban and Gabriel 2002;
Mackey 2002), official multiculturalism has sparked a series of
political-philosophical debates regarding its meaning vis-a-vis the
Canadian identity, the right of recognition, and the rights of
minorities (e.g., Charles Taylor's "Politics of
Recognition" in Gutman 1994; also the discussion of Liberal
Multiculturalism by Kymlicka 1991, 1998b, 2003; Kymlicka and Marin,
1999). On the one hand, the policy has been criticized for dividing the
country (Bissoondath, 1993, 1994); on the other, many scholars question
whether this policy can genuinely safeguard the rights of minorities
(Bannerji 2000; Li 1988; Thobani 1995). Indeed, since its inception, not
only has Canadian multiculturalism policy been subject to various kinds
of scrutiny, both friendly and hostile (Ley 2007), its focus, reference
point, and mandate have also been evolving (Kunz and Sykes, n.d.). In
the last four decades, the official policy interpretation of Canadian
multiculturalism has at least gone through four stages of evolution:
Ethnically Multiculturalism in the 1970s, Equity Multiculturalism in the
1980s, Civic Multiculturalism in 1990s, and Integrative Multiculturalism
in the 2000s (Fleras and Kunz 2001; Kunz and Sykes, n.d.).
Despite these ongoing debates and evolutions, as Fleras and Elliott
(2003) point out, as the signature piece of legislation of Canadian
multiculturalism policies, the CMA has institutionally transformed
policies at all levels of government through related federal,
provincial, and municipal legislation. The implementation of the CMA,
therefore, involves social engineering of an intertwined multilevel
infrastructure composed of different levels of government and
non-government organizations. However, as the core piece that glues all
the relevant policies together, the CMA remains a commonly criticized
"toothless" policy (Kunz and Sykes 2007; Mackey 2002), i.e., a
highly symbolic document without adversarial effect. In other words, it
has no legal power to coerce people and organizations to comply.
According to the CMA, all government departments and agencies are only
required to submit an annual report of their compliance, (1) which is
largely based on each department's internal self-examination. At
the societal level, the government has created
"diversity-driven" funding programs to encourage the promotion
of multiculturalism. One of the major programs is Canadian
Heritage's Multiculturalism Program (CHMP), which funds non-profit
and non-government organizations (hereafter referred to as community
organizations (2)), including educational institutions, for projects
that meet the priorities and objectives of the program (Abu-Laban and
Gabriel 2002). This program supports a broad range of activities at the
community level through an extensive network of community organizations
that are positioned as community partners.
Multiculturalism is, of course, not only a federal concern. The
factors that led to the development of the federal legislation have also
had a similar impact on provincial governments. Although
constitutionally, provincial governments have a great deal of autonomy
in developing and implementing legislation in many areas, including
multiculturalism, many provincial governments followed the federal
government and enacted their own provincial multiculturalism actor
policy. As Garcea (2006) observes, while most of these provincial acts
or policies have similar purposes, policy goals and the conferral rights
or benefits to groups vary in terms of their organizational mechanism.
Only a few provincial and municipal governments have allocated dedicated
resources for similar diversity-driven funding programs to support
implementation of the policy at the community level. British Columbia,
which enacted its own British Columbia Multiculturalism Act (BCMA) in
1993, is one of the provincial governments that has a formal government
unit to oversee the implementation of the provincial act. Like their
federal counterparts, under the provincial act, all BC departments and
agencies are required to submit an annual report of their compliance
with the BCMA. The BC government has also established a funding program,
the BC Antiracism and Multiculturalism Program (BCAMP), which is similar
to the federal program in providing support to community organizations
to take part in the implementation of BCMA.
CHALLENGES OF POLICY IMPLEMENTATION
Social scientists have long pointed out that gaps between policy
intention and actual implementation are common (e.g., Lineberry 1977;
Lipsky 1980; Pressman and Wildavsky 1984; Yan 1998). Institutionally,
government policies are interpreted into some social programs, which in
turn have their own specific interpretation of the original policies.
Based on the funding criteria and reporting systems established by
governments, community organizations funded by these social programs are
required to develop their own policies and procedures for their staff to
follow (Yan 2003). The assumption that the original intention of a
well-designed policy will be smoothly reinterpreted through the
organizationally complex implementation process has long been challenged
in the literature (Lineberry 1977; Pressman and Wildavsky 1984). The
official tenets of the multiculturalism framework reflect the
governmental ideology of multiculturalism, which as Kymlicka (1998b)
argues, is overwhelmingly focused on integrative society-building
functions. However, as Li (1999) notes, the CMA is ambiguous and always
subject to individual interpretation. It becomes even more ambiguous
when its actualization is further subject to constant reinterpretation
by the ministers, civil servants, and community organization staff and
volunteers who have discretion during the implementation process to
match the stated intentions of the policies and funding criteria with
their localized knowledge of community needs (Evans and Harris 2004).
Both the federal and BC governments have stated the importance of
community organizations as their partners in the implementation of
social policies? Through the diversity-driven funding programs,
community organizations, as partners, are encouraged to actualize policy
intentions and to promote multiculturalism at the grassroots level. To
understand the process of implementing multiculturalism policies, we
cannot ignore the gap between the official discourse on multiculturalism
as embedded in government policies and the actual practice of community
organizations. Since government funding is based on a narrow
conceptualization of official multiculturalism by the corresponding
government departments, such as the Multiculturalism Branch of the
Department of Canadian Heritage (CH) (4) and the Settlement and
Multiculturalism Division (SMD) under the British Columbia Ministry of
Attorney General,>> local activities and practices that embrace
popular understandings of multiculturalism may not be captured and
reflected in the respective governments' tracking record. This can
be especially important when the existing funding and tracking systems
directed by governmental bodies responsible for multicultural policies
may leave little room financially for community organizations to respond
effectively to the unique local challenges associated with the growing
diversity in each community.
Many people criticize multiculturalism as "lip service."
Despite the fact that there is a myriad of literature on the
political-philosophical debates surrounding multiculturalism, there is
very little information on how multiculturalism policies are
implemented, particularly at the community level, and how these policies
are reinterpreted in the funding process, as well as in the day-to-day
programming of community organizations. To assist in filling this gap,
we decided to seek funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities
Research Council Multiculturalism Strategic Grant Program to conduct an
exploratory study. We chose British Columbia as the site of the study,
not only because the investigators are researchers affiliated with three
different higher education institutions in different parts of this
province, but also because BC receives a relatively large proportion of
the immigrants and refugees coming to Canada. In 2006, over a quarter of
the population of British Columbia was comprised of individuals from a
visible minority group. Diversity is a reality in most BC communities,
particularly in urban areas. According to the 2006 Census, (6) 45% of
City of Vancouver residents were immigrants and 51% were visible
minorities. Despite the fact that the Multiculturalism Act is a national
policy, its concern is overwhelmingly focused on urban areas, where most
immigrants tend to settle (Edgington and Hutton 2002). Diversity is
readily apparent in the demographic landscape of many larger urban
communities, while in smaller urban and rural areas, the notion of
diversity is less pronounced, as evidenced by demographic profiles that
are predominantly homogeneous and White (Beshiri 2004). Taking this into
consideration, this study has taken the geographic differences into
perspective by focusing on three major cities in BC--Vancouver, Kelowna,
and Prince George.
This perspective is important particularly when there is an
increasing policy preference on the part of governments to diversify the
settlement choices of immigrants (see Citizenship and Immigration's
2001 report on the geographical distribution of immigrants). This has
led to new initiatives that encourage immigrants to settle in rural
regions. In British Columbia, recent government policies and
initiatives, such as the establishment of three new universities--in
Prince George, Kelowna, and Kamloops--and the temporary foreign worker
program, have initiated demographic changes in rural areas. The
"traditional face" of these cities and towns is becoming more
diverse due to the need to attract students and employees, which, in
effect, has led to the abrupt increase in minority faces in rural areas.
At the time of this study, 15% of Kelowna's total population was
immigrant and 6.2% visible minority, while in Prince George, 9.6% of the
population was immigrant and 6% visible minority.
RESEARCH METHOD
The study, which was conducted from May to November, 2006, employed
a mixed-method approach including a survey, media analysis, and
qualitative interview to obtain answers to three specific research
questions. Due to the complexity and richness of the data, in this
paper, we will focus on the findings of the individual and focus group
interviews which were designed to seek answers to the following
question: from the perspectives of community organizations, local-level
government officials and service recipients, what are the challenges
they face when implementing multiculturalism policies, as a response to
the increasing diversity in their local communities. The design of the
qualitative interview was informed by Grounded Theory (Glaser and
Strauss 1967), particularly in the analysis process. Qualitative data
generated from interviews and focus groups were organized and analyzed
by using open and axial coding methods. The constant comparison
principles were also used to organize the codes into themes reported
below.
Altogether, eleven local leaders and government officials from all
three levels of government were interviewed. The government officials
were identified through their departmental affiliations. The local
leaders and formal officials were identified either through the
researchers' personal contacts or referred by the officials whom we
interviewed. They are (or were) all directly responsible for the
implementation of either the CMA or BCMA. Since this study focuses on
the operation of the two Acts, we decided not to interview politicians,
who are seldom directly involved in the actual implementation of policy.
These interviews, which lasted from sixty to ninety minutes, were
largely conducted at the respondents' respective place of work,
usually in their private offices or boardrooms. We also conducted six
90-minute focus groups in the three cities. The participants of these
six focus groups were recruited by our community partners and were
mostly from a group of multiculturalism, antiracism, immigrant, and
community service organizations listed on the BC government website. (7)
Three of the focus groups (N=17) investigated how members of community
organizations in each city perceived their roles and the actual work of
implementing the policies. In order to capture the routine practice of
multiculturalism at the community level, only frontline workers who were
responsible for the day-to-day service delivery were invited. The focus
groups with service providers were conducted at a local service
organization in Vancouver, at a room at the public library in Prince
George, and in a meeting room at the back of a local coffee shop in
Kelowna. Another three focus groups (N=14) were conducted to investigate
service users' perceptions and experience of services delivered
under the auspices of multiculturalism policies. Therefore, only service
users who attended programs classified as multiculturalism programs by
the referring community organizations were invited. The focus groups
with service users were conducted in a meeting room at a local service
agency in both Vancouver and Prince George, while the focus group of
service users was conducted in the meeting room at the back of a local
coffee shop in Kelowna. We also conducted a textual analysis of a
selected set of documents including the two Acts, annual reports of the
last ten years from the provincial and federal departments responsible
for multiculturalism, and other relevant information.
FINDINGS
Findings from our study indicate that multiculturalism has been
discursively embraced by all levels of government and community
organizations in civil society. Our findings also reveal some different
understandings of multiculturalism at various levels of government,
which, however, have been moving in the same direction in supporting
community organizations, a recognized partner in implementing policies
at the grassroots level. Funding for multiculturalism programs at both
the federal and provincial levels has been reduced and application
procedures have been reconfigured into more convoluted forms in order to
meet the increasing accountability requirements. As a result, service
providers and users participating in our focus group interviews, who
tend to have a broader perception of multiculturalism, have expressed
their frustration, resistance, and creativity in actualizing the a
multiculturalism policies in their everyday practice.
Implementing Multiculturalism: An Ambiguous Policy Process
Before we report our findings, we need to understand the policy
context that the funding program is designed to serve. To secure funding
for multiculturalism programs, community organizations in BC must refer
to two separate sets of multiculturalism Acts and their respective
funding criteria. Both the federal and the BC funding program criteria
can be understood as the expression of the interpretation of the
respective acts. A key question in this regard is: are these two Acts
and funding criteria interconnected?
1. Weak Inter-government (8) Connection
BC adopted a multiculturalism policy in 1990 and enacted the BC
Multiculturalism Act in 1993. Although the BCMA shares a similar policy
concern with its federal counterpart, the relationship between the two
Acts is not clear. According to our key informant at the local Canadian
Heritage (CH) office, the province did consult their office when they
were drafting the BCMA. In fact, as one of our key informants who was
directly involved in the enactment of the act remembered, the BCMA
includes ideas from a variety of sources, including the CMA and other
provinces' multicultural legislations. The two Acts, therefore,
resemble each other in terms of their purposes: the recognition of
diversity, respecting multicultural heritage, fostering full
participation, and advancing harmony. However, as one of our key
informants involved in implementing this Act in the early 1990s pointed
out, unlike the CMA, the BCMA did not include the term
"preservation" in regard to cultural heritage. In terms of
organizational structure, both Acts established an advisory body to
provide advice to the minister responsible for overseeing their
actualization, as well as a mechanism to ensure the compliance of all
their departments and agencies through annual reporting. Other than this
weak inter-textual relationship, our key informants from both CH and the
Settlement and Multiculturalism Division (SMD) suggested that, in the
implementation process, these two acts do not have any other connection.
As stated by one of our key informants from the SMD,
We don't have [a] direct relationship to the federal government's
act. The provincial government has its multiculturalism act.... The
provinces created it, [the] Multiculturalism Act. So it's a little
bit different.... [O]ther than collaboration, or communication with
the federal government in the areas that are responsible for
multiculturalism and racism, there isn't anything that goes back to
linking to the Federal Act.
The intergovernmental relationship between the two responsible
departments is informal and incidental. To a large extent, it depends on
the people who run the program. As a CH key informant told us,
As I say, there were very formal and very good [working
relationships], in the 90s. I mean, we were all over one another,
it was a loving game. And you know, we consulted them every step of
the way, we went to their meetings.... [W]e even traveled together
occasionally, and we targeted communities together.
Previously, the federal and provincial operation units shared
information and co-funded some projects, such as the Hastings Institute
in Vancouver. Another major example of the collaboration between these
two levels of government was a multiculturalism funders committee,
members of which included representatives of three levels of government
in charge of multiculturalism funding and representatives of some local
foundations. At these meetings, they discussed issues related to funding
priorities and duplication.
This committee is no longer active, according to our key informants
at the provincial and federal levels. This can be attributed largely to
the change in personnel in different jurisdictions and the ongoing
reduction in funding programs that has resulted from various new regimes
at both levels of government. As another CH key informant observed,
there is always tension between them and their provincial counterparts,
a tension also intensified by a sense of competition between the two
levels of government. One key informant from SMD noted that
at a government level ... you've got, especially the national
level.... Canadian Heritage has a lead, but ... we're certainly
doing [things] at a [provincial] level, and when we look at
national comparative studies in what we're doing.... Compared to
others, it's [the provincial effort] all over the map. We're
actually doing quite a bit in British Columbia, compared to others.
2. Interpreting Multiculturalism Policy: A Floating Signifier
Of the eleven key informants whom we interviewed, nine have been,
or are currently, government officials who are responsible for the
implementation of multiculturalism policies. Their understanding of the
intent and nature of multiculturalism sheds light on how these policies
are interpreted in the implementation process. As indicated in our
findings, the interpretation among these key players is diverse. Perhaps
as Gunew stated (quoted in Fleras and Elliott 2003), multiculturalism is
a "floating signifier" without one fixed meaning. The inherent
fluidity of this policy is caused and shaped by the ideology of the
ruling regime, which sees multiculturalism as a tool for other political
and social purposes.
At both the federal and provincial levels, the implementation of
multiculturalism policy has experienced constant institutional change.
In the last few decades, the federal multiculturalism file has been
shifted from the Ministry of Multiculturalism (1985-1989) to the
Ministry of Multiculturalism and Citizenship (1989-1993) to the Ministry
of Canadian Heritage (1993-2007) and, most recently, back to the
Ministry of Citizenship and Immigration (2008-present) (see Dewring
2009). This shift also signifies a new political mandate of the
multiculturalism policy and programs. (9) At the provincial level, the
multiculturalism file has experienced shifts from the Ministry of
Environment and Human Rights (1993-1994) to the Ministry of the Attorney
General (1994-1999) to the Ministry of Government Services (1999-2000)
and to the Ministry of Community, Aboriginal, and Women's Services
(2001-2004), then back to the Ministry of the Attorney General
(2004-2009). In June, 2009, it was relocated to a new ministry, the
Ministry of Citizens' Services. Changes in ministers are also often
accompanied by a possible reinterpretation of the policy, as one veteran
provincial key informant suggested:
Our last minister was minister "H". But they liked, they wanted to
be associated, that government wanted to be associated with
anti-racism, multiculturalism, supporting members of races,
immigrants. They believed in that. So, uh, in fact, you know
something like they always had things for us to do.... So, it was
an act of time, when the new government came in (authors' italics)
In other words, the official interpretation of the policy is always
subject to the ruling regime's ideology and political purposes.
Indeed, the policy may just be a floating signifier.
In our conversations with key informants, we noticed that among all
the institutional shifts, the relationship between multiculturalism and
immigrant settlement is always a major issue. Like its federal
counterpart, the BC multiculturalism file has been merged with and
separated from the immigration file. In the most recent provincial
government restructuring, the multiculturalism file has been separated
from the immigrant settlement file, while at the federal level, it was
again merged with the Ministry of Citizenship and Immigration. Almost
all of the provincial key informants have pinpointed that, at least at
the provincial level, the spirit of the BCMA is not only about
immigrants and ethnic minorities, but about everyone in the province. As
one provincial informant noted,
Well, multiculturalism is inclusive of everybody. If there is no
distinction in terms of holding in a particular ethnic group,
multiculturalism is about everyone, everyone, and that's also in
the Multiculturalism Act.
Our key informant who had taken an active role in the enactment of
the BCMA has even indicated that lumping multiculturalism with
immigrants and even antiracism may run the risk of marginalizing the
BCMA to focus only on visible minorities. This is of particular concern
to him since most ministers in charge of the multiculturalism file, at
both the provincial and federal levels, have tended to be visible
minorities and/or immigrants.
However, this perspective is not shared by the officers who had or
have run the provincial multiculturalism program. Four key informants,
who have been involved in the operation of the BCMA, saw anti-racism as
part of the multicultural mandate. Indeed, a closer look at the two Acts
shows that they incorporate the perspective of race differently.
Conceptually, the CMA is largely based on "cultural
diversity," while the BCMA has a more elaborate understanding of
diversity, which includes "race, cultural heritage, religion,
ethnicity, ancestry or place or origin." Promoting racial harmony
and racial diversity are clearly inscribed in the BCMA. One of the key
informants pointed out that, unlike the CMA, the BCMA actually does not
mention anything about the preservation of cultural heritage; however,
he also admitted that the public generally perceives it does, due to the
popular understanding of the CMA. This confusion certainly has caused
different expectations during the implementation process, particularly
at the community level, which we will examine later.
3. Multiculturalism on the Cheap? Shrinking Functions and Resources
The constant shifts among different departments have also hurt the
continuity of the implementation process and jeopardized the partnership
with community organizations. One key informant offered this astute
observation:
You know as well as I do that continuity--to address something in a
continuous way and to have the kind of institutional knowledge and
skills and competence even to get after something--you need that
kind of history of not just the bureaucracy, but the relationship
between the bureaucracy and community agencies, and when this moved
along--they were basically, so often--and you have agencies in the
community that you are supposed to be funding, and then they are
supposed to be carrying out that kind of function in the community.
All of that gets turned ... the equilibrium in the relationship and
the kind of skills that people have, get turned around and develop
a whole new beginning. So it's like starting over again, building a
relationship with the bureaucracy, building a relationship with the
minister. And so you are always at the beginning stage in terms of
the relationship with the bureaucracy, with the minister, and
applying for grants.
The constant shift of the responsible department's
institutional position at both levels of government has also come with a
redelineation of the function of the policy. At both the federal and
provincial levels, the key informants indicated that in the constant
shifting process, the institutional change function of the policy has
been curtailed. The most noticeable example cited by many key informants
is the legacy of the Hastings Institute, which was originally supported
by three levels of governments through the multiculturalism programs.
One CH key informant described the Hastings Institute as a good example
of what is "essential for what's called a good institutional
change project" because of its unique institutional change training
focus. The Hastings Institute was set up by the City of Vancouver to
provide cultural diversity and leadership training to its staff and
other public institutions
(http://vancouver.ca/hastingsinstitute/about.htm). However, it was
pointed out by a few key informants that due to the loss of financial
support and the change in government policy priorities, the Hasting
Institute is no longer in a position to provide this kind of training.
Meanwhile, this move away from institutional change was also reflected
in the change of the CH staff title from "social development
officer" to "program officer" At the provincial level,
the branch in charge of the multiculturalism file is no longer hosting
inter-ministry meetings to facilitate the implementation of the policy
across government, as it has in the past.
The weakening of the institutional change function occurred at the
same time as the budget for multiculturalism at the federal and
provincial levels was reduced. As Li (1999) wryly observes, the federal
budget for multiculturalism was always meager. The 2006/2007 total
budget of CH (10) was 1,419.2 million dollars. Broadly speaking, the CH
has a set of diverse funding programs, mainly encapsulated under the
Canadian Identity Strategy, which are seen as a critical part of the
multiculturalism policy. However, only 7.7 million dollars (11) of this
budget was allocated to funding programs that community organizations
could directly access. At noted in table 1, there is a downward trend in
funding allocated to this program. Budget cuts have also led to the
discontinuation of some other programs such as the Canadian Ethnic
Studies and Heritage Language programs.
A similar cut in provincial programs was observed by the provincial
key informants. In 2006/2007, the budget for the multiculturalism
programs amounted to five hundred thousand dollars, a drastic decrease
from the forty million dollar budget of 1994/1995. (12) Moreover, within
this budget, only a portion of the funding is allocated to funding
programs directly accessible to community organizations. For instance,
in 2006/2007, close to 40% of the half-million dollar budget was
allocated to the Critical Incidence Response Model, which funds projects
mostly initiated by the staff of the SMD in collaboration with local
partners; community groups cannot directly apply for these funds.
In sum, at least in BC, both the provincial and federal governments
continue to be active in supporting multiculturalism programming at the
community level. However, although the CMA has provided a broad base for
the BCMA, the latter has extended the cultural discourse embraced by the
official federal version of multiculturalism to a cultural-racial
discourse. As we later report, this extension has led to some confusion
at the community level. Meanwhile, the relationship between these two
Acts is, at most, a weak inter-textual one. In actual implementation, no
clear effort has been recorded to coordinate the activities initiated
under the auspices of federal and provincial multiculturalism programs.
Although the federal and provincial governments may have many mechanisms
to put the tenets of the CMA and BCMA into practice, it is doubtful that
there is a clear commitment from either government to implement these
multiculturalism policies, when one considers the shrinking financial
resources invested by both levels of government and the shifting
departmental base of the programs. It is under these conditions that
community organizations often engage in efforts to actualize
multiculturalism at the community level in ways that are often not
documented in official reports.
Community Organizations: An Odd Partner
In the case of both the CMA and the BCMA, community organizations
are included in the implementation plan. While the CMA states its
intention to support and assist individuals, organizations, and
institutions by way of a series of activities related to the purposes of
the Act, the BCMA has explicitly stated that the minister may provide
grants and that not-for-profit organizations may apply to the minister
for grants under this Act to fund programs. As one provincial key
informant stated, "I definitely feel community organizations are
involved in implementing the Act, and ... I feel, they're part of
the whole partnership building in the leadership in the Act." The
role of community organizations in implementing the multiculturalism
policy is also appreciated by the service users who attended our focus
groups. One Vancouver focus group participant observed,
I think in my experience with multicultural [community]
organizations, they have done a number of good programs. Let people
know about their rights with workshops like media advocacy. It was
amazing and I know they have done a number of cultural stuff there.
The advantage that community organizations hold in actualizing the
policy is perhaps due to their closeness to the people affected, i.e.,
they can relate the policies to the realities of people's everyday
lives.
I think we have the relationship with the people. We see
individuals are individuals. This is actually a lot of work, and we
have experience in doing it. We are closer to the clients than the
government could ever get (a participant in the Vancouver service
provider focus group).
1. A Commonsensical Understanding of Multiculturalism
When asked about their knowledge of the two Acts, a majority of
participants in our focus groups acknowledged they had never read them.
As one participant said, "Personally, I know there is something
that exists. But since I am not a lawyer, I see no reason to learn them
on my own. But I am aware that there is something in place." In
other words, most of their understanding of the idea of multiculturalism
is based on their "common sense" which, to a large extent, is
the result of their own personal experience, coupled with the official
version of multiculturalism embedded in the CMA and promoted by the
media. Their understanding of multiculturalism is, consequently, far
more diverse than what our key informants have articulated.
We can roughly categorize these diverse understandings into three
major categories. The first, which is mainly generated from the
perspective of service users, closely echoes the federal
multiculturalism policy. They believe that it promotes respect for
diversity and people's rights in Canadian society. As a service
user from Prince George observed,
Many times they think that multiculturalism is for visible minority
[sic] and/or for immigrants but multiculturalism is for everybody
and if we really see the philosophy and the sense of
multiculturalism, it tells us that nobody is [a] stranger if we
make [the] effort to know each other.
In other words, it is a means of community building, or as another
service user suggested, "So then my, sort of, point of view, of
multiculturalism is not just [about] existing different culture [sic].
[It] has to be well blended and all the nationality [sic], including
Canadian, has to work together and make [sic] building better
community." This is certainly aligned with the nation-building
notion of official multiculturalism.
The second category of understanding is relatively critical of the
concept of multiculturalism. Some in this category see multiculturalism
as a political mechanism to control and to marginalize visible
minorities and immigrants. As one service provider put it bluntly,
"[M]ulticulturalism has become a new colonial tool of
domination." Among the service providers in our focus groups, we
noticed some rural-urban differences. Compared to their counterparts in
the other two cities, service providers in Vancouver seldom express this
kind of critical perspective. One of the possible reasons may be the
social atmosphere in the local community. Service providers in both
Prince George and Kelowna reported a resistance in their own community
toward responding to the emerging multicultural and multiracial reality.
As one non-Vancouver service provider noted, "[I]t just seems very
interesting that there isn't the interest and the intention to
multiculturalism in [City X], and that seems to act itself out in
day-to-day activities." Similarly, a non-Vancouver participant from
another city in our study pointed out that "in [City Y] there
hasn't [sic] been any obvious, open issues. There is [sic] a lot
[of] issues, but they are low, are laying pretty low, nobody is kind of
admitting they exist until something happens, but there hasn't been
anything really incidence [sic], not since the burning up [of] the
crosses on lawns."
The third category of understanding views multiculturalism in
Canada as a politically correct concept that is now both obsolete and
ineffectual. In other words, multiculturalism is political rhetoric
rather than a policy with true vision. As one service provider stated:
Multiculturalism spoke to this. They do not deal with the real
reality of the people and they do not promote change, they do not
support sustained involvement. It is, politically driven, i.e., a
catch phrase of some MLA elected. After elections are over, it
disappears. It comes up again at the next election, whatever,
whatever politician jumps on that bandwagon, you hear a lot about
it, but then it's gone again. There is no persistency of [sic] with
the policies, or with the agencies that are supposedly promoting
the policies, they seldom last more than a year.
This kind of observation also reflects people's frustration
with the ambiguity of multiculturalism policies. Addressing this issue,
one Vancouver participant had this suggestion: "I would like to
encourage the three levels of government to talk to each other about
what multiculturalism really means. From what I have heard, they all
have different interpretations." Unlike the key informants who had
been involved in the actual operation of the policies at different
levels of government and who tended to have a more concrete vision of
what the multiculturalism policy embraced, people in the community have
a more diverse and ambiguous understanding of the meaning of
multiculturalism.
2. Dancing with Everyday Reality: A Pragmatic Approach
When asked about their understanding of the relationship between
multiculturalism and immigrants, our focus group participants, who were
either service users or frontline workers from community organizations,
expressed a very consistent and strong consensus that multiculturalism
policies cannot be separated from the immigrant settlement issue.
Although some of them also agreed that multiculturalism policies are
intended for everyone, many viewed multiculturalism and settlement as a
continuum of the immigrant integration process. As one Vancouver service
provider said:
In terms of how settlement services are different than
multicultural policies, I think again it is a continuum.
Conceptually, the idea was that everybody coming into Canada,
arriving here, has some rights, and to some extent, if you look in
terms of multicultural policy, from the time you arrive in Canada,
you have all the rights. It only takes time to look through the
whole continuum from small services to more and more until you
reach the citizenship status, then you have the whole range of
services.
It is hard for these community organization participants to make
the kinds of policy distinctions made by key informants. To them,
immigrants are the multicultural reality that they face day in and day
out:
We partner with communities that promote multiculturalism, but our
part of it is, we work with the immigrants, and that's already like
they are the multicultural community that we are working with. This
part seems to talk about the community making ourselves more
welcome to receive immigrants (Kelowna service provider).
Interestingly, a majority of the service users referred to our
three focus groups by our community partners were immigrants to Canada.
These referrals may reflect the organizations' clientele, as well
as how multiculturalism is understood by these community organizations.
Indeed, from the service users' perspective, multiculturalism is a
means to attract immigrants to this country.
Immigration is the need of Canada right now. Canada cannot survive
without immigration because of its low natural birth rate. However,
it seems now every country in the world is trying to attract new
immigrants. So there is vast competition in the world market for
immigrants. Therefore, if Canada lacks the multiculturalism that
attracts new immigrants, potential immigrants will not immigrate to
Canada (Prince George service user).
Being immigrants themselves, the service users also have strong but
diverse opinions on the relationship between multiculturalism and
anti-racism. One group of participants tended to think that the
promotion of anti-racism signified the failure of the multiculturalism
policy, which--to them--was intended to advance the understanding and
celebration of different cultures. One service user outside Vancouver
told us of a racist incident she experienced right after exiting a
multicultural celebration event:
I think anti-racism is the outcome of not respecting
multiculturalism. So this is advance state. There was a time that
we used to get funding to hold multicultural night and then
multicultural family night, multiculturalism fashion show, and all
that, it was all mostly fun, fun and entertainment, people was
relating multiculturalism just as sharing multicultural food and
then, uh, having singing and dancing, but not serious, uh, it's
like after that, they leave the event and everything is forgotten.
Some see that multiculturalism and antiracism represent two sides
of the same coin--the proactive and the reactive. A service user from
Vancouver shared his vision:
I think racism exist [sic] because of the notion of "I think I am
better than you." The meaning of multiculturalism is living in
harmony together. And under multiculturalism, I do not think racism
will exist. But again, it does not mean it will be eliminated. But,
yes, certainly multiculturalism and racism are related together
[sic].
Many agreed that we may need both anti-racism and multicultural
policies. Indeed, as some service users suggest, dealing with
anti-racism can generate more "concrete and effective"
outcomes that governments need to address, while promoting
multiculturalism "is much more long term and maybe the people who
are funding or making the policy cannot see where to go from there"
(Vancouver service user).
Compared to the service users, the service providers who attended
our focus groups exhibited a more practical attitude towards the
relationship between multiculturalism and anti-racism. Participants from
Prince George and Kelowna were still struggling with the slow response
of their own communities in dealing with the demographic changes in
their local context. Therefore, their attitude was that anything was
better than nothing. In Vancouver, service providers had a relatively
longer history in dealing with both issues. Some of them expressed
frustration at seeing funding shrink for the promotion and celebration
of diversity. As a result, some learned to jump on the "bandwagon
of antiracism" because, as one service provider commented,
"that is how we [community organizations] interpret our chances of
getting money." In the end, funding is often the driving force that
motivates many community organizations to take part in the
implementation of the BCMA and CMA.
Funding for Multiculturalism: Connecting the Policy with Practice
in the Community
To engage community organizations in the implementation process,
the most effective mechanism that government departments responsible for
multiculturalism policies can use is funding. To accommodate shrinking
budgets and the increasingly stringent requirements of public financial
accountability, both levels of government have introduced a more
complicated funding procedure.
1. The Ungenerous Partner: Balancing a Shrinking Budget in an
Accountable Way
As a key informant told us, CH experienced a major audit in the
late 1990s that resulted in a more stringent process of funding and a
new emphasis on outcome and value for money principles. The CH
Multiculturalism Program now provides mainly project-based funding. Core
funding for community organizations has been eliminated. A key CH
informant describes their position:
Because--the thing is--my department, and the Multiculturalism
Program is not there to fund people for the sake of keeping them
going. We fund projects that are issue-based that would address a
need, and you know ... in funding dollars available to us year by
year by year, we have to have just project funding.
As one key informant suggested, this new funding program has led to
a more accountable system, which balances local needs with national
priorities. In 2006/2007, three objectives of the Multiculturalism
Program were set as priorities: identity, social justice, and civil
participation. The preservation of cultural heritage, as well as the
celebration and recognition of cultural diversity, were no longer in the
picture. Instead, antiracism was clearly stated as one of the six
expected outcomes of the Program. If the Program intent was to actualize
the CMA, the formal interpretation of the CMA had now shifted from the
broader perspective of culture to a narrow focus on race.
The changes in both the process and focus of the Program have
created complexities for community organizations that, as one key
informant remarked, they "need[ed] to get their heads around."
CH key informants claim that they have always tried to work with
community organizations in the process. However, the Multiculturalism
Program is managed directly by the Ottawa office, and the final approval
of the projects always rests in the hands of the minister responsible.
In other words, this program can be highly political, but the key
informants claim that through a systematic consultation process,
interests of local communities are incorporated well into the national
business plan, and the application process is open and transparent.
Nonetheless, community organizations indicated to us that they feel
forced to compete, not on locally derived criteria, but on the basis of
nationally derived criteria, i.e., the political needs and concerns of
the ruling regime.
At the provincial level, the funding situation is not any easier or
less political than at the federal level. The BC funding program, the BC
Antiracism and Multiculturalism Program (BCAMP), has an unequivocal dual
mandate. This dual mandate reflects the original intention of the BCMA,
which is different from the CMA explicitly in terms of its racial
articulation. Our provincial key informants who have been in the
position of running the program during the last two decades share a
common view of the purposes of the BCAME As one of them pointed out,
It is [for] cross-cultural communication, the mutual respect, the
elimination of barriers. Even going back to minister "M" days,
multiculturalism, federally and provincially, used to be perceived
as giving away money for festivals. Wrong! No money was ever given
away for festivals. Unless the minister got involved, no!
However, a different and convoluted funding procedure was
introduced by the new Liberal government in early 2000. Funding was no
longer to be determined by the minister, deputy minister, or individual
senior staff member. Instead, it was now determined through a request
for proposal process, and an assessment committee comprised of program
officers who often had no experience with the multiculturalism policy.
The minister apparently had little direct involvement in making funding
selections. Once decisions were made, the approved projects were handled
by service agreement officers who had no direct contact with the
community organizations involved and were mainly concerned with
monitoring financial accountability criteria, which were often
quantitatively defined. To this end, a logic model was implemented in
order to rationalize this procedure of awarding funds to agencies.
This model was intended to ensure accountability by laying out a
clear set of criteria to determine, or, as one provincial key informant
told us, "What are the outcomes here? What are the measurables?
What are the deliverables? What is appropriate for us to fund?" In
2006/2007, the BCAMP had three objectives: provide multiculturalism and
anti-racism education; develop community partnerships and facilitate
cross-cultural dialogue; and provide critical responses to racism and
hate. A key informant clarified the BCAMP's position as follows:
It's up to these agencies [community organizations], these
communities to define multiculturalism, anti-racism, then link back
to our three objectives within the BC Antiracism and
Multiculturalism Programs. So, we are not going to put in an
opinion to what, how we separate multi and anti-racism or how it's
linked. It's as long as these agencies are clear about meeting the
goals and objectives of our program.
2. A Reluctant Partner: The Struggle of Community Organizations
Service providers who have been involved in multicultural programs for a
long time have noticed changes in funding at both levels of governments.
One service provider nostalgically commented,
I think when I started in the early 90s that support was great, I
really felt that we were accomplishing something. [When] we came up
with certain things, we applied for it. We had the support. The
funding agencies would come up here once a year and meet with all
of the agencies that they would fund. We would share information.
We work in partnerships trying not to compete with each other....
[B]ut now in the last five years, I believe that they are
determined to eliminate any funding for multiculturalism.
The shrinking funding has hit community organizations that lack
core funding for operations especially hard. Project-based funding tends
to be unstable and hampers program planning:
Agencies are looking for sort of long-term funding rather than just
project-based. It would be good if that funding was [sic] on an
on-going basis.... [I]t takes a lot of work to write a proposal for
a project and then implement a project and then it's done. And you
know then there is no further funding.
This quotation from another service provider also indicates the
difficulties of securing funding for a project.
The complicated application and reporting system has created
tremendous pressures on community organizations. It is so complicated
that community organizations have to deploy their limited resources to
deal with the endless paperwork and even to attend workshops to learn
how to complete the application form. In terms of the provincial BCAMP
program, a service provider had this observation:
The reporting requirement and the applications are so complex. You
have to have a master's degree just to fill them out sometimes. And
... if you are applying for five thousand dollars, you have to go
through the same process as if you are getting the maximum, which
is twenty-five thousand dollars, right? And they don't allow you
any funding to actually do those proposals.
The extra burden added through the required paperwork is evident in
others' experiences. Another service provider informed us how their
application was rejected only because they missed one signature on the
application form.
Participants from community organizations also feel that the
funding process is a political process, which is not always fair to
small communities due to their limited influence on federal and
provincial electoral politics. As a service provider observed,
If you can get somebody [on] your side elected, then you have some
chance to get the money. If you come from a small community, you
have a lesser chance because you cannot help a politician to be
elected, so you lose the bargaining power. The complaints from the
small communities have always been that the funding goes to the
larger community.
Indeed, this observation is consistently echoed by service
providers from all three cities in our study. For example, one community
organization applied to the CH Multiculturalism Program and had its
project recommended to the minister responsible at that time; this
minister then sat on the project for some time before finally turning it
down. This incident reflects how the political will can be a tricky
trump card of the "rational" process.
The funding difficulties have not discouraged community
organizations from taking part in efforts to promote multiculturalism
(including fighting against racism), particularly when most community
organizations do not distinguish promotion of multiculturalism from
helping immigrants settle and integrate. In other words, promoting
multiculturalism is part of their day-to-day programming. This holistic
perspective seems to allow them a more creative and flexible approach to
finding resources. A few of our focus group participants have mentioned
that their agencies have given up pursuing grants from the two
multiculturalism funding programs. In fact, only a very small number of
community organizations in our focus groups had received any funding
from the Multiculturalism Program and the BCAMP. As a service provider
explained, this short-term funding only "makes the people have high
expectations next year. And then you are in trouble. So I am no longer
very interested in doing this kind of thing. I don't want to stir
up something and fail people's expectation next year."
Instead of relying on these two funding programs, many community
organizations have creatively pooled resources from a variety of
sources. One way is to channel funding from other programs funded by
different sources--including government departments, such as Service
Canada, health and public safety programs, settlement services, gaming
and the United Way--in order to support their multicultural programs.
For instance, one of the service providers of our focus groups had hired
a student through Service Canada to organize a festival that celebrated
diversity in Canada. What they need to do, as one service provider
explained, is to "put efforts into areas where you know they are
going to fund it. And then hope that there is 10% leeway to channel, to
put the money where it really needs to go [for multiculturalism
programming]." With limited financial resources, almost all
community organizations have appealed to volunteers for help in
providing multiculturalism programs. However, the lack of designated
financial resources for multiculturalism programming also marginalizes
this important work to a "sideway kind of thing" as described
by one Kelowna service provider, for many community organizations.
DISCUSSION AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS
As an exploratory study employing a qualitative method, the
findings of this study have limitations of generalization and of not
being able to fully answer the research question originally posed.
However, we believe the richness of the data provides some important
observations that may shed light on the implementation of
multiculturalism policies in Canada, at least at the community level.
Our findings indicate that there is considerable variation between
governments and service agencies as to what multiculturalism means on a
day-to-day basis in terms of how services are or need to be delivered,
and how Canadian citizens of diverse backgrounds experience
multiculturalism in their daily lives. At the Federal government level,
the focus, reference point, and mandates of multiculturalism policies
have undergone at least four different stages of evolution since its
inception (Fleras and Kunz 2001). Intriguingly, according to our
findings, the evolution of the official multiculturalism policies has
not received much attention in the community. The varying understandings
of multiculturalism in Canada have always been diverse. As Kymlicka
(1998a) has long suggested, the Canadian government may have the
responsibility to initiate a clarification of Canada's
multiculturalism policy. A further study on the disconnection between
the evolution of official discourse and the everyday practice in the
community is deemed necessary.
Judging from our findings, the funding program under the CMA, i.e.,
the CHMP, has shifted from a narrow construction of cultural
inclusiveness and "preservation and celebration of cultural
heritage" to a broader construction which conflates culture with
race (or more specifically, visible minorities) and emphasizes removing
barriers to full participation and integration. The shifting of focus in
funding to antiracism programming at both levels of government has
further signified such change. However, the spirit of celebrating
cultural differences embraced by the early version of official
multiculturalism has still been a major frame of reference for the
public, at least at the community level.
The unwitting shift from preservation of cultural heritage to the
elimination of racial barriers may just be a reflection of the
government's prompt reaction to key structural problems in Canadian
society that may hamper the nation-building mission of the government.
However, this shift may have inadvertently led to more confusion because
it has not been explicitly and widely discussed through public
consultation (Kunz and Sykes, n.d.). Judging from the responses of the
participants in our six focus groups, whose understandings and
perceptions of Canadian multiculturalism may reflect those of the
general public, this subtle shift is not necessarily a welcome one,
regardless of whether the changed focus is well intended. Our findings
suggest that both preservation of cultural heritage and elimination of
racism may still be important to many people in the immigrant community
as well as to the general public. Concerns have also been raised when
antiracism is subsumed in the discourse of multiculturalism (Day 2002;
James 2008). The conflation of culture with race may lead to a
"culturalization of difference" (Razack 1998), and further
confuse the public understanding of how multiculturalism policies are
implemented. It also leads to a denial of the need for the structural
change that is necessary for an effective elimination of racial
barriers. Learning from our European counterparts, these barriers
constitute one of the most detrimental structural factors that have
contributed to the recent social conflicts in many European countries.
This is particularly alarming when the funding for actualizing
multiculturalism policies is shrinking. The reactive approach, coupled
with the shrinkage in funding, can only support band-aid solutions. To
properly deal with cultural and racial diversity issues in the
twenty-first century, the Canadian and BC governments should either
revise their respective Multiculturalism Acts or introduce new
legislation to eliminate racial barriers in Canadian society.
As both levels of governments have formally recognized in their
policy, community organizations are their chosen partners, at least at
the grassroots level. However, our findings indicate that this
partnership is not an easy one. Indeed, shrinking resources have
weakened the community partners who are struggling for stable and core
funding for survival. The convoluted procedures in the funding
application process also discourage community organizations, which often
have resources too limited to even attempt to apply for the meager
funding. While ethno-specific organizations have already been cut out of
multiculturalism funding (Abu-Laban and Gabriel 2002), mainstream
community organizations, as at least reflected in some
neighbourhood-based organizations, are also financially under siege
(Anucha et al. 2006; Fabricant and Fisher 2002; Yan and Lauer 2008). If
governments truly believe in the roles and functions of community
organizations as their partners in implementing the multiculturalism
policy, they may need to reconsider a funding program that has a
simplified application procedure and offers the resources needed to
support a stable and permanent community infrastructure that translates
this policy into people's everyday lives at the grassroots level.
We also observe that diversity and multiculturalism are experienced
differently in different locales in British Columbia. This process is,
in part, shaped by the frequency and types of contact that communities
and groups of people have with others of diverse backgrounds in their
particular socio-cultural-racial context. In other words, the needs of
community organizations are not necessarily always the same. A flexible
funding policy is needed to address local needs.
It is our hope that this exploratory study may provide some insight
into the implementation of multiculturalism policies in BC. However,
more studies are needed to examine how the multiculturalism policy is
actualized in other parts of Canada. Even within BC, our preliminary
rural-urban comparison is only tentative. More in-depth studies of rural
BC are needed, given the changing demographic landscape. The continuing
trend to diversify the destination of new immigrants to Canada
highlights the need to ensure that multiculturalism is relevant in
places outside large, urban, metropolitan centers. Immigrants,
regardless of their ethno-racial backgrounds, are encouraged to settle
in less urban and smaller cities and towns in Canada as a way to
diversify the population, as well as to contribute to the local economy
of these places.
To conclude, this exploratory study indicates that the
interpretation of the multiculturalism policy has shifted since it was
first officially introduced in the CMA and BCMA. Due to the ambiguity of
the policy, different interpretations have been adopted in different
arenas and at various stages of the implementation process. To actualize
this policy at the community level, there is a great need for government
to reinvest in building relationships with community organizations so
that, together, they can build and sustain the capacity to deliver much
needed services and programs.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The paper is based on the findings of a study funded by a
Multiculturalism Strategic Grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities
Research Council. We would also like to thank our community partner,
Affiliation of Multicultural Societies and Service Agencies of British
Columbia, for their support and valuable advice regarding the design of
data collection instruments and process, as well as their assistance in
recruiting participants for our focus groups. However, the authors are
fully responsible for the information, analysis and arguments presented
in this paper.
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NOTES
(1.) Since, in this paper, our focus is on the implementation at
the grassroots level, we will not discuss how and how well this
reporting is done.
(2.) We understand that the non-government, non-profit sector is
diverse. Some members in this sector may not identify themselves as
community organizations. However, in our experience and in the
literature, "community organization" is a common self- and
externally imposed identification among members of this sector.
(3.) See the Final Evaluation Report of the Voluntary Sector
Initiative Process Evaluation published by Human Resources and Skills
Development Canada (http://www.hrsdc.gc.ca/eng/
cs/sp/sdc/evaluation/sp-ah213e/page00.shtml) and the Draft Discussion
Paper: Better Outcomes: Stronger Communities: Enhancing the BC
Government Non Profit Relationship
(http://www.cnpm.ca/PDF%20Files/GNPI_ExSumm_V15_Sept2008.pdf).
(4.) This branch was recently moved to the Ministry of Citizenship
and Immigration, which has been renamed the Ministry of Citizenship,
Immigration, and Multiculturalism.
(5.) This division was restructured after we completed our study.
The immigrant settlement section of this division has been reassigned to
the Ministry of Advanced Education and Labour Market Development.
(6.) Data re the three cities are based on the data retrieved from
the 2006 Community Profiles at
http://www12.statcan.ca/census-recensement/2006/dp-pd/prof/92-591/
search-recherche/frm_res.cfm?Lang=E/.
(7.) A full directory of all these agencies can be found on the BC
Government's Welcoming BC website at
http://www.welcomebc.ca/en/service_providers/agencies.html.
(8.) In this study, we did interview three informants from the
three municipalities. However, all these key informants suggested that,
although the municipal governments have tried to deal with the
multiculturalism issue in their local communities, they lack the
constitutional mandate and necessary resources to do so. They also
reported that as cities of Canada and BC, they are obliged to adhere to
the two Acts, but there is no inter-textual or institutional connection
between the cities and the federal and provincial government on these
particular policies. Therefore, we decided not to include municipal
government in this analysis.
(9.) For a brief history of the implementation of the CMA, refer to
Abu-Laban and Gabriel (2002) and Fleras and Kunz (2001).
(10.) Canadian Heritage was responsible for the Multiculturalism
Act when this study was done. Since November, 2008, the Harper
government has reassigned the multiculturalism file to the Ministry of
Citizenship and Immigration, which has now become the Ministry of
Citizenship, Immigration, and Multiculturalism.
(11.) See Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat at
http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/rpp/0708/pch/pch04-eng.asp#name4.2.1.
(12.) This information was provided by one of our key
informants--one of the managers running the program during that period.
MIU CHUNG YAN is associate professor in the School of Social Work,
University of British Columbia. He was also the leader of the
Settlement, Integration, and Welcoming Community Domain of Metropolis
British Columbia. His research interests include labour market
experience of new generation youth from visible minority immigrant
families and the bridging functions of place-based community
organizations at the neighbourhood level.
SHIRLEY CHAU is assistant professor in the School of Social Work,
UBC Okanagan in Kelowna. Her research interests are marginalized
populations, cross-cultural social work, and anti-racist social work
practice. Her publications are concerned with the experience of
immigrants in Canada, including understanding the cultural predictors of
health among Chinese seniors and the settlement experience of Asian
"satellite" adolescents in Canada.
DAVE SANGHA is assistant professor in the School of Social Work at
the University of Northern British Columbia. His research interests
include antiracism, human rights, diasporic communities, and northern
social work practice. Prior to his appointment at UNBC, Dave worked with
the Ontario Race Relations Directorate, the Ontario Human Rights
Commission and the Ethnocultural Equity Branch of the Ontario Ministry
of Education.
TABLE 1. Funding for the federal multiculturalism program *
Year 196-97 197-98 198-99 199-00 101-02 103-04
Funding 29.2M 31 23.5 24.5 7.5 11.2
Year 105-06 106-07
Funding 6.5 7.7
* Information abstracted from information posted on the website of
the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat (http://www.tbs-sct.gc.
ca/tbs-sct/index-eng.asp). The table was created based on information
on May 12, 2008.However, due to various changes in government policy
strategies and accounting systems, these data are useful only for
referencing purposes.