Archive for the ‘Post war Canada’ Category
Comparing the extent and character of immigration into Canada for the periods 1900-1930 and 1945-1975
Introduction
Immigration has always been a fundamental part of Canadian history and society. However, arguably immigration after World War II took on a different extent and character.
Historiography
Franca Iacovetta studied Italian immigrants – stressed family formation during baby boom years.
Mostly males, then women and children.
Theories
Prior to World War II. majority of immigration to Canada was from U.K. and U.S.A.
By the 1970s, a shift toward Asia. With immigrants from China and India.
Push and pull factors.
Controversies
Involvement of the government in shaping immigration post World War II.
Sources and methods
The baby boom of the 1950s
Many of the 1.8 million immigrants that arrived in Canada between 1946-1962, were of child-bearing age. Embraced values of home and family.
Events and incidents
Policies aimed at attracting professional positions.
Federal government embraced a “points system” in 1967, applicants were ranked to objective criteria concerning education, skills, and resources.
Caused a dramatic shift from Europe to Asia.
Sponsored immigration tended to bring in less skilled
Conclusion
Why did the character and extent of immigration change after World War II? Increase government involvement in shaping society. The need for immigration for economic growth. The agency of people, connecting families globally.
Crude Birth Rate
Term is used in regards to tracking population growth. Connect the term with baby boomers and immigration growth in post World War II Canada.
Continuity or change? Which best describes the nature of Canadian society in the thirty years before and after 1940?
Introduction
The end of World War I signaled a return to the status quo in society. While many individuals returned from war disillusioned, the social structures remained largely intact. On the other hand, World War II proved to be a catalyst that ushered in a new and largely different era in Canadian society.
Historiography
Social historians interested in wartime experience as a lens through which to study the way societies react during times of stress. The demands of war strain the fabric of society, exposing ethnic, racial, class, and gender relations.
Doug Owram, Born at the Right Time – explores baby boom
Theories
So why was World War II such a catalyst for change?
Linking the war to the establishment of a social security system encouraged Canadians to believe that, while tremendous sacrifices were made, they were not made in vain.
Creation of a new role for government.
Controversies
Was post World War II society uniformly prosperous, conservative, and conformist?
Sources and methods
Different approaches to analyzing Canadian society post World War II – consumer, baby boom, immigrant.
Economic – wage rates.
Government involvement.
Events and incidents
Many Canadians concurred with the Prime Minister, Mackenzie King, that a “new world order” could be created from the ashes of World War II. The Prime Minister noted in a speech in 1942: “men who have fought in this war, and others who have borne its privations and suffering, will never be satisfied with a return to the conditions that prevailed before 1939.”
Expanding social security benefits, implementation of a national unemployment scheme and a family allowance program – creation of a “welfare state.”
1940 Unemployment Insurance Act passed
Conclusion
With change we see continuity, and with continuity we see change. The era is one of transition. The events that informed Canada post World War II had origins in the thirty years post World War I.
Does an economic analysis offer the best explanation for social change in Canada, 1945-1970?
Introduction
Historical assessments of post-war Canada tend to conclude that the period from mid-1940s to early 1970s was one of economic progress and great prosperity. But who benefited from economic expansion?
Historiography
John Porter, The Vertical Mosaic, argues that Canada may have been a “mosaic” of different peoples whose diversity Canadians were proud to celebrate, but these same people were organized hierarchically, where race/ethnicity were closely interconnected.
Theories
Rising standard of living, increase wages, low unemployment rate – equated to the argument for economic prosperity.
Controversies
Increasing number of women joined the workforce. Taking employment that was segmented by gender, and paid less.
Race and ethnicity also factors in how others did not share the “great prosperity”. Unskilled Italian workers, south Asian agricultural workers.
The gap between the rich and poor remained the same.
Many of Canada’s poor were working poor.
Privileged social influence of two groups: men, and people of British heritage.
Sources and methods
Consumer culture
Agricultural work. Unskilled labour. The failed unionization of the mostly female workforce at Eaton in 1948.
Events and incidents
Quiet Revolution – increased role of the state.
Conclusion
Problem with defining economic analysis – the charting of economic prosperity. Doesn’t tell the whole story. Class, race, and gender tell a different story about post war Canada. Unskilled immigrant labour. Increase number of women joining the workforce, but in low paid unequal roles.
Dr. Benjamin Spock
American pediatrician whose work changed child and family dynamics in the 1950s and 1960s. His most well known book, Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care sought to address the concerns about juvenile delinquency during the 1950s. Families whose parenting skills had been severely undermined by the drive for conformity during the 1950s, turned to Spock’s book for advise and reassurance.
Juvenile Delinquency
Juvenile delinquency refers to antisocial or illegal behavior by children or adolescents. In Canada, juvenile delinquency became tied to social and moral concerns after World War II.
Social commentators worried that hanging out at seedy cafes or in street gangs would lead youth to disorderly behaviour, crime, or “sexual delinquency.”
The deviant behaviour of teenagers threatened the “ideal society” of the 1950s, a society that desired stability and traditional after the upheaval of World War II.
“The Eskimo Problem”
The “Eskimo Problem” emerged in the 1950s. The Canadian government introduced a policy to remove Inuit people to unsettled Arctic islands. The idea behind the policy was to allow the Inuit to re-establish self-sufficient “traditional” societies away from the insidious influences of Euro-Canadians.
The removal of the Inuit reflected the immense faith that non-Aboriginal Canadians shared in the ability of experts to solve problems such as poverty and disease through social engineering.
The “Eskimo Problem” was defined at a conference on Eskimo Affairs held on 19-20 May, 1952. The “Eskimo Problem” was defined as having three components: an unstable economy, poor health, and a growing dependence on government benefits.
See article by Alan Rudolph Marcus, Relocating Eden: The Image and Politics of Inuit Exile in the Canadian Arctic
Leonard Marsh
Leonard Marsh was the director of a social research programme at McGill University, when appointed director of the Committee on Post-War Reconstruction in 1941. In March 1943, the Report on Social Security in Canada was published with Marsh as its principal author.
Marsh argued that all Canadians “found work, remained healthy, and were properly fed, housed, and educated.” To achieve these goals it urged that the state take an active role in managing the economy and in providing minimum levels of social security.
John Maynard Keynes
John Maynard Keynes was a Cambridge economist whose writings provided a scientific analysis of economic cycles and showed how these economic cycles could be manipulated. The unemployed were not moral failures; rather, unemployment resulted from impersonal forces at work in the economy, forces that could be countered by state action.
Keynes argued for more government, rather than less. To inflate a depressed economy, Keynes argued that government needed to increase public investment.
Keynes’ ideas, although not embraced during the 193os, became widely accepted after the Second World War.