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      Immigration, Multiculturalism, and the Social Contract

      The Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          Since the failure of the Meech Lake constitutional reforms and the crisis of national unity prompted by the most recent Quebec referendum, the Canadian Multiculturalism Act has been subjected to particularly intense and hostile scrutiny. While some of the criticism of this policy reflects merely parochial adherence to particular cultural or religious traditions, some of it has raised more significant doubts about the internal coherence, efficacy, and overall desirability of the policy. Most importantly, the multiculturalism policy is faulted for attempting to pursue two simultaneously unachievable goals, viz., to integrate ethnic minority groups into the dominant institutions of the society, while at the same time to protect them against various pressures to assimilate to the dominant culture. Critics have pointed out that social institutions and cultural values are interdependent. Not only do cultural value systems provide the central legitimations for social institutions, but the internalization of these values through socialization processes provides agents with their primary motivation for conforming to institutional expectations. This means that integrating an agent into a system of institutions can only be achieved by assimilating the agent to its underlying cultural system.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          applab
          The Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence
          Can. j. law jurisprud.
          Cambridge University Press (CUP)
          0841-8209
          2056-4260
          July 1997
          June 9 2015
          : 10
          : 02
          : 343-361
          Article
          10.1017/S0841820900001569
          aac7c499-9785-4328-8c86-71ac5caff740
          © 2015
          History

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