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The Census of Canada and Immigration & Ethno-cultural Data Chuck Humphrey University of Alberta February 10, 2006
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Outline Significance of the Census Distinction between Statistics and Data Channels of Access Statistical Sources from the 2001 Census Data Sources from the 2001 Census Post-censal Data
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Acknowledgements Some of the material in this presentation was made available by Tina Chui at Statistics Canada.
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Census of Population n Largest survey in Canada taken every five years n Long history of questions on: place of birth citizenship year of immigration n 2B form consists of 51 questions compared to the 7 questions of 2A
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Census of Population
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n New question in 2001 on birthplace of parents
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n Household activities n Education n Labour force activity n Occupation n Mobility n Income Census of Population
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What Census Data Tell Us n Size & origins of the immigrant population, children of immigrants, ethnic groups, etc. n Settlement & mobility patterns of immigrants and ethnic groups over time n Labour market experience of immigrants, adult children of immigrants, visible minorities, ethnic groups
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Advantages of Using Census Data n Up to 100 years of historical data n Detailed information on birthplaces, ethnic origins, visible minority groups, languages, etc. n Data available for small geographic areas n Wide range of socio-cultural and economic variables can be used in analysis
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Limitations of Census Data n Not longitudinal – cannot follow the same respondents over time n No year of arrival information (asks the year landed immigrant status was obtained) n No immigration program information (e.g. categories of admission; selection characteristics) n Outcome measures, rather than process
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Statistical Information Statistics numeric facts/figures created from data, i.e, already processed presentation-ready Data numeric files created and organized for analysis requires processing not ready for display
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Chart of Statistical Information
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Continuum of Access ACCESS CHANNELS Open Free Statistics Restricted Expensive Data Depository Service Program Remote Job Submission Statistics Canada Website Data Liberation Initiative Custom Tabulations Research Data Centres
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STATS STC Website E-STAT Custom Tabulations DLI CENSUS 2001 CENSUS 2001 DATA Public Use Microdata Tables Post- Censal Ethnic Diversity Survey PUMF RDC
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Statistics : STC Website STATS STC Website E-STAT Custom Tabulations DLI
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http://www.statcan.ca
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Statistics : DSP (E-STAT) STATS STC Website E-STAT Custom Tabulations DLI
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E-STAT
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Statistics : DLI Tabulations STATS STC Website E-STAT Custom Tabulations DLI
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Tables DLI Tables
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Statistics : Custom Tabulations STATS STC Website E-STAT Custom Tabulations DLI
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Custom Tabluations n Metropolis Core Tables –Three levels of geography n CSD n Between CT and CSD n DA –Available for 1996 and 2001 n Canadian Heritage
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Data : DLI Tables DATA Public Use Microdata Tables
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DLI : Tables n Same as the tables from the Statistics Canada website that are sold ($), but put away your Visa or Mastercard. The DLI license covers the cost. n Tables at the DA-level of census geography n Some very large tables at DA-level that aren’t available from the STC website n Need Beyond 20/20 table browser
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Data : DLI Public Use Microdata Files DATA Public Use Microdata Tables
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DLI : Public Use Microdata n Anonymised microdata for three units of observation –Individuals –Families –Households n The Individuals file is available; still waiting on the Families and Households files
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Post-censal : Ethnic Diversity Survey Post- Censal Ethnic Diversity Survey PUMF RDC
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EDS : Public Use Microdata File
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EDS Public Use Microdata n Anonymised microdata available with SPSS and SAS syntax files n 355 variables and 41,705 cases (unweighted) n Available through DLI
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EDS : Research Data Centres
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EDS Confiential File n Confidential file, also referred to as the analytic file n Over 1,000 variables n 13 RDC’s across Canada n Must apply on a project by project basis n Approval involves two-stage process: peer review and security clearance
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Survey Objectives : to provide information on the ethnic & cultural backgrounds of people in Canada and how these backgrounds related to their lives today To better understand how Canadians of different ethnic backgrounds interpret and report their ethnicity Target population: Population aged 15 and over living in private dwellings in the 10 provinces, excluding Indian Reserves and Aboriginal Ethnic Diversity Survey
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Two-phase stratified design Phase I: 2001 long census questionnaires (one-in-five households in Canada) Phase II: Selected a sample of respondents from the Census according to specific characteristics Sample selection: Divided the Census population into groups according to the responses to the following three questions: Ethnic origin Birthplace of respondent Birthplace of parents Total of 15 strata; random selection within each strata EDS Sample design & selection
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57,000 persons selected to be interviewed (no proxy reporting) between April and August 2002 Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing, approximately 35 minute interviews Interviewed in 9 different languages 42,500 people were interviewed EDS Interviews
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EDS Content Modules & Themes Entry Ethnic self-Definition Respondent & Family Background Knowledge & Use of Language Family Interaction Social Networks
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EDS Content Modules & Themes (continued) Civic Participation Interaction with Society Attitudes Trust & Satisfaction Socio-economic activities Who answered 2001 Census questionnaire
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Unpacking Ethnicity Discrimination & Unfair Treatment EDS Social Networks Participation in Society Transnationalism Socio-economic Status Social Capital Transmission of Culture & Language EDS Potential Research Areas
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Census of Population
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