Navigation Bar E-mail Us Maps Publications Search Home

Who Gets In: What's Wrong with Canada's Immigration Program - and How to Fix It

The terrorism of September 11, 2001, turned an intense spotlight on Canada’s lax immigration and refugee programs. “The longest undefended border in the world” became, for the United States, a pressing security concern, and for good reason.
Canada is the most immigrant-friendly country in the world, accepting (on a per capita basis) twice as many immigrants as the next most welcoming nation, many of them people about whom little is known.

Stoffman heartily supports responsible immigration and a compassionate refugee program. We have neither, he argues, and it’s time for Canadians to demand of their leaders that this most important program be rescued from political partisanship and returned to the foundations of national interest and humanitarianism on which it was built.

Written by Daniel Stoffman. Published by Macfarlane, Walter & Ross, 2002.
Who Gets In
   
Catalogue No. 1-55199-095-4
Price $34.99
Format Hardcover
Pages 205
Language English only
 
Price and availability subject to change. Shipping and applicable taxes extra.
Questions about this product? Please e-mail us.
Last modified: October 17, 2002

Immigration main page · Social Issues main page
What's New · Home · Search · Books on Canada · Canadian Maps and Charts · Ordering · E-mail Us

©Federal Publications Inc., 1998 - 2016
165 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5H 3B8
Phone: (416) 860-1611 or toll-free 1-888-433-3782 · E-mail: info@fedpubs.com