New research has found that the Canadian dream is proving elusive for some racialized second-generation Canadians born since the 1960s, despite having higher educational levels than their white counterparts.The study says racialized second generation Canadians are an increasingly important group in Canada. One in four people in Canada identifies with a non-white population group, either racialized or visible minority and that number is growing.
"I don't think the Canadian dream is accessible to everyone equally," said Rupa Banerjee, one of the authors of the study and associate professor at Toronto Metropolitan University. It focused on people 26 to 35, using data from the 1981, 1991, 2001, 2021 Canadian Census of Population and the 2011 National Household Survey. Examining the progress of five racialized groups, South Asian, Chinese, Black, Filipino, and Latin American, it compared them to third-and-higher generation white Canadians.
A student makes his way around Toronto Metropolitan University in Toronto on Wednesday, April 26, 2023. "You'll see here and there, but not even a fraction of the diversity that you'll just see walking down the street or in the subway. Why is that? There is discrimination. I mean, we cannot pretend that it's not."Due in part to nepotism, parental connections or referral-based hiring, the status quo is maintained, and some racialized second-generation Canadians don't get their foot in the door, she said.
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