COMMUTING TO OFF-RESERVE EMPLOYMENT BY CANADIAN FIRST NATION’S RESERVE RESIDENTS

Improving economic outcomes for First Nations people in Canada is a national policy objective and, of course, a priority for First Nations (FN). Among the options are policies designed to improve education and health of the FN individuals. These may result in increased migration of Reserve residents...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lashley, Phillip 1968-
Other Authors: Olfert, Rose M, Coates, Ken, Zang, Lihui
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: University of Saskatchewan 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/11922
id ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/11922
record_format openpolar
spelling ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/11922 2023-05-15T16:16:02+02:00 COMMUTING TO OFF-RESERVE EMPLOYMENT BY CANADIAN FIRST NATION’S RESERVE RESIDENTS Lashley, Phillip 1968- Olfert, Rose M Coates, Ken Zang, Lihui 2019-03-20T22:20:04Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10388/11922 unknown University of Saskatchewan http://hdl.handle.net/10388/11922 TC-SSU-11922 commuting reserve first nation education employment community well-being Thesis text 2019 ftusaskatchewan 2022-01-17T11:52:32Z Improving economic outcomes for First Nations people in Canada is a national policy objective and, of course, a priority for First Nations (FN). Among the options are policies designed to improve education and health of the FN individuals. These may result in increased migration of Reserve residents to off-Reserve locations, often urban centres, with better employment and income prospects. At the Reserve level, there are programs and policies in place to encourage and support economic development on Reserves. Many Reserves are remote and with limited potential. A third channel by which economic outcomes for FNs may be improved is by commuting to off-Reserve employment while retaining their on-Reserve residence. Positive urban agglomeration spillovers in the form of employment opportunities for rural populations, and the resulting effect of this employment on the economic conditions of rural communities, are well established for the general population. This has not been investigated for Reserve populations. This paper examines the relationship between out-commuting from Reserves and Community Well-being of the FNs. We also estimate the incidence and determinants of off-Reserve employment by FNs. We find that distance from urban centres is negatively related to Community Well-being, as are population growth rates. Percentages of the population over the age of 15 and out-commuting rates from Reserves are positively associated with Community Well-being Scores. Out-commuting is, in turn, facilitated by better high school completion rates and negatively affected by distance. We conclude that improved access to off-Reserve employment for Reserve residents is an important means of improving the well-being of Reserve populations, and that a high school education is an asset Thesis First Nations University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
op_collection_id ftusaskatchewan
language unknown
topic commuting
reserve
first nation
education
employment
community well-being
spellingShingle commuting
reserve
first nation
education
employment
community well-being
Lashley, Phillip 1968-
COMMUTING TO OFF-RESERVE EMPLOYMENT BY CANADIAN FIRST NATION’S RESERVE RESIDENTS
topic_facet commuting
reserve
first nation
education
employment
community well-being
description Improving economic outcomes for First Nations people in Canada is a national policy objective and, of course, a priority for First Nations (FN). Among the options are policies designed to improve education and health of the FN individuals. These may result in increased migration of Reserve residents to off-Reserve locations, often urban centres, with better employment and income prospects. At the Reserve level, there are programs and policies in place to encourage and support economic development on Reserves. Many Reserves are remote and with limited potential. A third channel by which economic outcomes for FNs may be improved is by commuting to off-Reserve employment while retaining their on-Reserve residence. Positive urban agglomeration spillovers in the form of employment opportunities for rural populations, and the resulting effect of this employment on the economic conditions of rural communities, are well established for the general population. This has not been investigated for Reserve populations. This paper examines the relationship between out-commuting from Reserves and Community Well-being of the FNs. We also estimate the incidence and determinants of off-Reserve employment by FNs. We find that distance from urban centres is negatively related to Community Well-being, as are population growth rates. Percentages of the population over the age of 15 and out-commuting rates from Reserves are positively associated with Community Well-being Scores. Out-commuting is, in turn, facilitated by better high school completion rates and negatively affected by distance. We conclude that improved access to off-Reserve employment for Reserve residents is an important means of improving the well-being of Reserve populations, and that a high school education is an asset
author2 Olfert, Rose M
Coates, Ken
Zang, Lihui
format Thesis
author Lashley, Phillip 1968-
author_facet Lashley, Phillip 1968-
author_sort Lashley, Phillip 1968-
title COMMUTING TO OFF-RESERVE EMPLOYMENT BY CANADIAN FIRST NATION’S RESERVE RESIDENTS
title_short COMMUTING TO OFF-RESERVE EMPLOYMENT BY CANADIAN FIRST NATION’S RESERVE RESIDENTS
title_full COMMUTING TO OFF-RESERVE EMPLOYMENT BY CANADIAN FIRST NATION’S RESERVE RESIDENTS
title_fullStr COMMUTING TO OFF-RESERVE EMPLOYMENT BY CANADIAN FIRST NATION’S RESERVE RESIDENTS
title_full_unstemmed COMMUTING TO OFF-RESERVE EMPLOYMENT BY CANADIAN FIRST NATION’S RESERVE RESIDENTS
title_sort commuting to off-reserve employment by canadian first nation’s reserve residents
publisher University of Saskatchewan
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/11922
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10388/11922
TC-SSU-11922
_version_ 1766001894754353152