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Skip module menu and go to content.menu index Update on Analytical Studies Research Online catalogue Low income and inequality Earnings, income and wealth Employment, unemployment and working time Education and training Immigration Labour turnover Workplace studies Demographic groups Institutional factors Spatial analyses Trends and conditions in CMAs Data development Other More information Analytical studies branch research paper series

Recent immigration and the formation of visible minority neighbourhoods in Canada's large cities

by Feng Hou
Business and Labour Market Analysis Division
Analytical Studies Branch research paper series, No. 221

Context

Ethnic neighbourhoods—neighbourhoods with a significant presence of a minority group—in Canada's large cities have long been a vivid reflection of the adjustment process experienced by successive waves of immigrants. Since recent immigrants are culturally different from earlier European immigrants, it is not clear whether rapidly expanding visible minority neighbourhoods in major Canadian cities will be transitional or enduring.

Objectives

This study addresses two questions. First, at the metropolitan area level, is the rapid expansion of visible minority neighbourhoods primarily associated with the increase in visible minority populations due to immigration or with a rise in their overall level of residential concentration?

Second, at the neighbourhood level, does the formation of visible minority neighbourhoods predominantly involve a process in which established non-visible minority residents move out in large number when a visible minority population moves into a neighbourhood?

Findings

Minority neighbourhoods, defined as census tracts with over 30% of their population from a single visible minority group, increased in number from 6 to 254 between 1981 and 2001. Most of these neighbourhoods were formed through a partial replacement of non-visible minority residents by visible minority group members. However, there was no evidence that the partial replacement would lead to an exclusive occupancy of some neighbourhoods by one visible minority group.

The emergence of minority neighbourhoods was associated more with a large increase in minority groups' share of the city population from immigration than with an increase in their tendency to concentrate in particular neighbourhoods. Visible minority immigrants arriving in the 1980s and 1990s were more residentially concentrated than earlier arrivals, and their level of concentration remained stable with time living in Canada. Overall, large visible minority groups were not as concentrated as were Blacks in large U.S. cities or as some non-visible minority groups were in the earlier decades in Canada.

Data Sources: The 1981 to 2001 Canadian Census 20% sample files.

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