cover image: New immigrants' assessments of their life in Canada : Évaluation par les nouveaux immigrants de leur vie au Canada

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New immigrants' assessments of their life in Canada : Évaluation par les nouveaux immigrants de leur vie au Canada

11 Feb 2010

In this paper, the Longitudinal Survey of Immigrants to Canada (LSIC) is used to examine how immigrants in the 2000-2001 landing cohort subjectively assess their life in Canada. The paper provides a useful complement to other studies of immigrant outcomes that often focus on employment, income or health. Four years after landing, about three-quarters of LSIC respondents said they were satisfied or very satisfied with their life in Canada, and a comparable proportion said their expectations of life in Canada had been met or exceeded. Nearly 9 out of 10 said that, if given the chance, they would make the same decision again to come to Canada. A broad range of demographic, social and economic characteristics are associated with subjective assessments. Positive assessments of life in Canada are less prevalent among individuals in their thirties and forties, and university graduates and principal applicants in the skilled worker admission category, than they are among other groups. While assessments of life in Canada are correlated with economic factors such as personal income, they are also correlated with social factors such as relationships with neighbours and perceptions of discrimination.
health education economics school psychology discrimination canada culture demography ethics immigrants immigration mathematics philosophy quality of life social indicators social sciences survey life satisfaction subjective well-being further education logistic regression correlation and dependence dependent and independent variables covariates emotion contentment diener ed diener

Authors

Houle, René

ISBN
9781100148267
Pages
33
Published in
Canada

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