Supporting the settlement and integration of newcomers in the Northwest Territories

Given the large number of immigrants arriving in Canada’s metropolitan centres, there’s an increasing need to disperse the benefits of immigrants to smaller centres -- one such place being the Northwest Territories. Government officials have responded, making public commitments to expand immigration...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brouwer, Nicole
Other Authors: Pendakur, Ravi
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/39096
id ftunivottawa:oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/39096
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivottawa:oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/39096 2023-05-15T17:46:25+02:00 Supporting the settlement and integration of newcomers in the Northwest Territories Brouwer, Nicole Pendakur, Ravi 2019 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10393/39096 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10393/39096 Research Paper 2019 ftunivottawa 2021-01-04T14:36:29Z Given the large number of immigrants arriving in Canada’s metropolitan centres, there’s an increasing need to disperse the benefits of immigrants to smaller centres -- one such place being the Northwest Territories. Government officials have responded, making public commitments to expand immigration in the North, through the launch of the Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot and the Northwest Territories’ immigration strategy. Due to these public commitments and a positive trend upwards in the number of immigrants moving to the Northwest Territories, this paper asks two important research questions. Firstly, should policymakers in the Northwest Territories take on more responsibility in settling and integrating immigrants? If so, how can they better support immigrants settling and integrating into the territory’s small and remote communities? This paper has responded to these questions by conducting an academic literature review and policy literature review to examine the settlement strategies used to integrate newcomers into small and remote communities across Canada. This research found that the most important factors for successfully settling newcomers in small and remote communities include opportunities for employment, social connection, housing, education, and settlement services. Based on this analysis, three recommendations were provided to policymakers in the GNWT – primarily focused on the labour market integration and social integration of newcomers -- to prepare for future territory-driven developments in the space of settlement and integration for newcomers. Overall, this paper calls on the GNWT to seize the opportunity to bolster settlement and integration programming in the territory, starting by conducting a full evaluation of settlement services to assess their current and future capacity. Report Northwest Territories uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa) Canada Northwest Territories
institution Open Polar
collection uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa)
op_collection_id ftunivottawa
language English
description Given the large number of immigrants arriving in Canada’s metropolitan centres, there’s an increasing need to disperse the benefits of immigrants to smaller centres -- one such place being the Northwest Territories. Government officials have responded, making public commitments to expand immigration in the North, through the launch of the Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot and the Northwest Territories’ immigration strategy. Due to these public commitments and a positive trend upwards in the number of immigrants moving to the Northwest Territories, this paper asks two important research questions. Firstly, should policymakers in the Northwest Territories take on more responsibility in settling and integrating immigrants? If so, how can they better support immigrants settling and integrating into the territory’s small and remote communities? This paper has responded to these questions by conducting an academic literature review and policy literature review to examine the settlement strategies used to integrate newcomers into small and remote communities across Canada. This research found that the most important factors for successfully settling newcomers in small and remote communities include opportunities for employment, social connection, housing, education, and settlement services. Based on this analysis, three recommendations were provided to policymakers in the GNWT – primarily focused on the labour market integration and social integration of newcomers -- to prepare for future territory-driven developments in the space of settlement and integration for newcomers. Overall, this paper calls on the GNWT to seize the opportunity to bolster settlement and integration programming in the territory, starting by conducting a full evaluation of settlement services to assess their current and future capacity.
author2 Pendakur, Ravi
format Report
author Brouwer, Nicole
spellingShingle Brouwer, Nicole
Supporting the settlement and integration of newcomers in the Northwest Territories
author_facet Brouwer, Nicole
author_sort Brouwer, Nicole
title Supporting the settlement and integration of newcomers in the Northwest Territories
title_short Supporting the settlement and integration of newcomers in the Northwest Territories
title_full Supporting the settlement and integration of newcomers in the Northwest Territories
title_fullStr Supporting the settlement and integration of newcomers in the Northwest Territories
title_full_unstemmed Supporting the settlement and integration of newcomers in the Northwest Territories
title_sort supporting the settlement and integration of newcomers in the northwest territories
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/39096
geographic Canada
Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Canada
Northwest Territories
genre Northwest Territories
genre_facet Northwest Territories
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10393/39096
_version_ 1766150053024497664