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Download fileThe social construction of statelessness in Canada: a study of national media 1939-2011
thesis
posted on 2021-05-23, 16:59 authored by Jocelyn KaneTo explore notions of knowledge production and narratives of truth surrounding statelessness in Canada, this study employs a mixed quantitative and qualitative methodology to a media analysis of 616 newspaper articles from Canada's two largest national newspaper, the Toronto Star and The Globe and Mail. Within a social constructivist analytical framework, it finds that using citizenship as a tool to divide 'us' from 'them', statelessness is constructed in such a way that reinforces power relations between those who belong in Canada and those who do not. This divide is achieved via the construction of the stateless person as the 'other' in Canadian society, the ill-recognition of statelessness as a phenomenon in and of itself, and thirdly, the construction of statelessness contributes to a blurring of the definitional clarity of statelessness, further complicating our understanding of statelessness as a separate and distinct form of status in the Canadian context.
History
Degree
- Master of Arts
Program
- Immigration and Settlement Studies
Granting Institution
Ryerson UniversityLAC Thesis Type
- MRP
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Keywords
Statelessness -- Press coverage -- Canada -- 21st centuryStatelessness -- Press coverage -- Canada -- 20th centuryStateless persons -- Press coverage -- Canada -- 21st centuryStateless persons -- Press coverage -- Canada -- 20th centuryStatelessness -- Canada -- 21st centuryStatelessness -- Canada -- 20th centuryStateless persons -- Canada -- 21st centuryStateless persons -- Canada -- 20th century