Creating Human Insecurity: The National Security Focus in Canada’s Immigration System
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.25071/1920-7336.21281Keywords:
Canada, immigration system, asylum seekers, human security, intersectionalityAbstract
This paper explores the processes through which Canada’s immigration system creates human insecurity for newcomers to Canada. With a focus on the new Immigration and Refugee Protection Act and post-September 11 security measures such as the Safe Third Country Agreement, I argue that the immigration system draws on and reaffirms national security discourses. Measures designed to create national security, in turn, create human insecurity for migrants and refugees. Using a feminist approach that explores how gender, race, and class oppressions intensify experiences of in/security, this paper suggests that the new national security measures within Canada’s immigration system will likely have a disproportionate impact on classed, raced, and gendered asylum seekers.Metrics
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Copyright (c) 2002 Michelle Lowry
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