Tag Archives: Canadian Studies Program UC Berkeley

Meet our new research fellow; undergrad course recommendations

An item from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Meet our new Sproul Fellow, Nicholas A. R. Fraser
  • Undergrad class suggestions with a Canadian angle
  • Upcoming event: The Politics of Coronavirus in Canada and the United States
  • External event: “Inuit: The Arctic We Want”
New Sproul Fellow Nicholas Fraser Studies Impact of Bureaucratic Culture on Government Policy
Dr. Nicholas A. R. Fraser, a political scientist specializing in the impact of organizational culture on policy application, officially joins Canadian Studies Wednesday as a John A. Sproul Research Fellow. As a visiting researcher, Dr. Fraser will assist program director Irene Bloemraad with research on migration-related topics.
Dr. Fraser received his B.A. from the University of Calgary and holds M.A.s from the University of British Columbia and Waseda University (Japan). He received his Ph.D. from the University of Toronto, where he was previously an associate at the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy.
Canadian Studies sat down with Dr. Fraser to discuss his past research and what drew him to Berkeley. Highlights from the interview are below: read the full piece on our website.
What sparked your initial interest in immigration?
Just before I finished my bachelor’s degree, I had opportunity to teach English abroad in Japan. That experience set the agenda for kind of research I do, because it was only by going to Japan that I realized how unique Canada is in terms of immigration and multiculturalism. I just hadn’t fully appreciated how different Canada is from other countries, even other developed democracies.
While I was over there, I had the chance to meet some foreign workers from Brazil, who told me how difficult it was to get legal status and to bring family members in. And I thought, that would be way easier in Canada, so why is it so hard here? I realized that actually, maybe I should look at the question another way – in a global sense, Canada’s immigration policy is comparatively pretty generous. I was curious where that comes from.
People often point to Canada’s history or culture as an explanation, but I think that’s a reductive way of looking at things. Australia, for instance, has a similar history, yet immigration is seen much less positively there and they have a much stricter refugee policy. So my research situates Canada in a comparative perspective to understand why we have a relatively generous refugee policy legacy.
Why did you apply to be a Canadian Studies Sproul Fellow?
I love the interdisciplinary approach here. UC Berkeley is an amazing research university, and there’s a great community here working on a number of different aspects of migration. But the number one reason is Irene. She’s a force to be reckoned within migration studies. The opportunity to work with someone that has so much influence on interdisciplinary migration studies, political science, psychology, sociology – that would be a game-changer. It’s the dream, really, getting to work with an amazing person at an amazing institution.
What will you be working on at Berkeley?
Irene and I are going to be doing a lot of things together. One project that we are considering is how multiculturalism affects legal proceedings. In court, for example, many people have a default expectation that witnesses will swear on the Christian Bible. So the question is, if you’re a juror, how credibly do you view people who choose to swear on another text, who are often religious or ethnic minorities?
This is an important issue, because we want to see if it feeds into structural biases against these groups. I’ve already done some experimental research on this topic in Canada with Colton Fehr, and I’ll be giving a talk on some of our preliminary findings in November. We’re still exploring, but my plan is to do a United States-Canada comparison, because this issue is obviously relevant to the United States as well.
Why do you think it’s important to study Canada?
Canada is a comparatively generous country when it comes to immigration and multiculturalism. As a Canadian, I think it’s important to understand why from a social sciences perspective, in an objective way, for informing better policy. Canada is not perfect – I don’t want to paint an overly rosy picture – but there are many things Canada has done right and could improve on in the future. If we have a better idea of why things worked, it makes better policy going forward.
I also think Canada doesn’t get enough attention within political science. A lot of research focuses on the US and Europe, but I think Canada is really important because it differs from those other places on important policy issues such as immigration. So I’m thrilled to be joining the Canadian Studies Program to contribute in any way I can.
Undergrad Course Recommendations: Franco-American Literature and Comparative Disability Law
Are you an undergrad still trying to fill a hole in your schedule, or just looking for an interesting class that covers a Canadian topic? Check out the following courses:
Instructor: Susan A. Maslan
In this course, students will explore the literary and cultural texts emerging from the long history of the French in North America. Throughout the semester, discussions will focus on the politics of representation, understanding the processes through which categories of “race” are shaped over time. While instruction will focus on the United States, the course will discuss New France (Quebec) and read excerpts from The Jesuit Relations.
This course satisfies the American Cultures requirement.
Instructor: David B. Oppenheimer
Comparative Equality Law uses a problem-based approach to examine how the law protects equality rights in different jurisdictions. The course will comparatively examine US and other international legal systems, including that of Canada, and provide a global overview of legal protection from and legal responses to inequalities. The course covers 5 topic modules: theories and sources of equality law; employment discrimination law; secularism, human rights and the legal rights of religious minorities; sexual harassment/violence; affirmative action, and gender parity.
UPCOMING EVENT
Elections Matter: The Politics of Coronavirus in Canada and the United States
September 14 | 12:30 pm | Online | RSVP here
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to have wide-ranging consequences on North American politics. The effect of the pandemicon Joe Biden’s 2020 win remains debated; meanwhile, Justin Trudeau hopes to use the belated success of his vaccine procurement strategy to win his party a parliamentary majority in the September 20 federal elections. How has COVID-19 shaped electoral politics in Canada and the United States as it relates to crucial recent and ongoing policy choices? Political scientist Daniel Béland will address this question while discussing the potential political and policy consequences of the upcoming Canadian elections.
Daniel Béland is James McGill Professor of Political Science at McGill University and director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada. His research focuses on public policy, political sociology, and federalism and territorial politics.
EXTERNAL EVENTS
Inuit: The Arctic We Want
September 14 | 1 pm ET (11 am PT) | RSVP here
On July 16-19, 2018, delegates from Alaska, Greenland, Canada and Chukotka (Russia) came together for the 13th General Assembly of the Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC). Under the theme “Inuit – The Arctic We Want,” delegates discussed policies and developed strategies for the 2018-2022 Alaskan Chairmanship of ICC. The event culminated in the adoption of the Utqiagvik Declaration, which serves as a guide for the ICC’s work over the 2018-2022 term and as a reflection of Inuit priorities across Alaska, Greenland, Canada and the Russian Federation. Please join the Wilson Center’s Polar Institute as we welcome ICC leaders to share their perspectives on the Utqiagvik Declaration’s priorities, reflections on their implementation since 2018, and goals for the final year of the Alaskan Chairmanship.
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720

Welcome back to campus; upcoming events; grizzly DNA surprise 🐻

A newsletter from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • A welcome message from program director Irene Bloemraad
  • Upcoming event: The Politics of Coronavirus in Canada and the United States
  • In the news: ‘Mind Blowing’ study links BC grizzlies and Native languages
  • Call for papers: Annual conference of the French Association of Canadian Studies
  • External event: Kitchen gadgets from the Kathleen Thompson Hill collection
  • External event: “Inuit: The Arctic We Want”
A Message From Our Director
This Wednesday marks an exciting milestone, as students return to Berkeley for the first time in over a year. Like many of you, we’re still navigating our physical return to campus and what that means for our program. But no matter how the fall shapes up, we’ll still be offering events and programs that create a forum for important Canadian topics, and supporting students engaged in research that promotes a greater understanding of Canada and its people.
As we work through a “return to normalcy” together, we thank you for being a part of our Canadian Studies community and hope to see you in person before too long!
Warmly,
Irene Bloemraad, Program Co-Director
UPCOMING EVENT
Elections Matter: The Politics of Coronavirus in Canada and the United States
September 14 | 12:30 pm | Online | RSVP here
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to have wide-ranging consequences on North American politics. The effect of the virus on Joe Biden’s 2020 win remains debated; meanwhile, Justin Trudeau hopes to use the belated success of his vaccine procurement strategy to win his party a parliamentary majority in the September 20 federal elections. How has COVID-19 shaped electoral politics in Canada and the United States as it relates to crucial recent and ongoing policy choices? Political scientist Daniel Béland will address this question while discussing the potential political and policy consequences of the upcoming Canadian elections.
Daniel Béland is James McGill Professor of Political Science at McGill University and director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada. His research focuses on public policy, political sociology, and federalism and territorial politics.
IN THE NEWS
‘Mind Blowing’ Study Shows Grizzly Bear DNA Maps onto BC Indigenous Language Families
A new genetic survey demonstrates an astonishing link between British Columbia’s coastal bear population and its Native people. As reported in Science, the study, which was supported by local Indigenous councils, shows that coastal grizzlies divide into three distinct populations. But to researchers’ surprise, the populations do not correspond with obvious geographic barriers; instead, they closely align with the region’s three main language families.
Nevertheless, the results make sense to study co-author Jenn Walkus, a member of the Wuikinuxv Nation. Humans and bears have many of the same resource needs, she notes, such clean water or a steady supply of foods like salmon. This would encourage both groups to settle in the same resource-rich regions. She says that the study demonstrates the importance of recognizing interconnectedness as a principle of conservation work, and managing resources with a view to all species.
Image: Michelle Valberg, Science Magazine.
Call for Papers: Annual Conference of the French Association of Canadian Studies
Deadline: September 30, 2021
Seventy years ago, the Report of the Royal Commission on National Development in the Arts, Letters and Sciences 1949-1951, headed by Vincent Massey, was published. Called by some “the most important official document in the history of Canadian culture”, the so-called ‘Massey Report’ was both the first investigation of the state of the arts and culture as well as cultural policies in Canada, and the first major plea in favor of a strategic and financial support from the federal government for culture and cultural institutions across the country.
The French Association of Canadian Studies (AFEC) will explore the legacy of the Massey Report at their next conference, scheduled for June 2022. The objectives of the conference will be to take both a retrospective and prospective look at the state of culture and cultural policies in Canada. Proposals for papers with a title (400 words max) and a short biography (100 words) must be submitted by email to the organizing committee by September 30, 2021. Please visit their website for complete information and applications directions.
EXTERNAL EVENTS
Exhibit: Kitchen Gizmos & Gadgets from the Kathleen Thompson Hill Culinary Collection
August 27 – November 28 | Napa Valley Museum | Learn more here
Kathleen Thompson Hill, a noted food and wine writer and Canadian Studies board member, has collected nearly 4,000 kitchen utensils as part of what she calls a “quirky obsession.” In a new exhibit at the Napa Valley Museum in Yountville, she highlights kitchens gadgets and gizmos you will not see anywhere else, from the first-ever ice cream scoop to the Toast-o-Lator. Previews for the exhibit begin this Friday, August 27; the exhibit will officially run from September 25 to November 28. Tickets are included with regular museum admission.
Inuit: The Arctic We Want
September 14 | 1 pm ET (11 am PT) | RSVP here
On July 16-19, 2018, delegates from Alaska, Greenland, Canada and Chukotka (Russia) came together for the 13th General Assembly of the Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC). Under the theme “Inuit – The Arctic We Want,” delegates discussed policies and developed strategies for the 2018-2022 Alaskan Chairmanship of ICC. The event culminated in the adoption of the Utqiagvik Declaration, which serves as a guide for the ICC’s work over the 2018-2022 term and as a reflection of Inuit priorities across Alaska, Greenland, Canada and the Russian Federation. Please join the Wilson Center’s Polar Institute as we welcome ICC leaders to share their perspectives on the Utqiagvik Declaration’s priorities, reflections on their implementation since 2018, and goals for the final year of the Alaskan Chairmanship.
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720

Check out our fall events lineup! 🍂 Plus: New research fellow; affiliate wins science award

Note these up-coming events from a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.  Also, thanks for the team at the Canadian Studies Program at UC Berkeley for their continued support.


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Canadian Studies welcomes Nicholas Fraser as new Sproul Research Fellow
  • Our Fall 2021 events calendar is here!
  • In the News: Trudeau announces snap elections, support for Afghan refugees
  • In the News: Affiliate Alison Gopnik wins prize for science popularization
  • External event: “Meet the Artists” conversation showcase
  • External event: Royal Canadian Legion Branch 25 90th anniversary picnic
Canadian Studies Welcomes Nicholas Fraser as New Sproul Research Fellow
Canadian Studies is pleased to announce that Dr. Nicholas A. R. Fraser will be joining our team as a John A. Sproul Research Fellow for Academic Year 2021-22, beginning September 1.
In his new role, Dr. Fraser will assist program director Irene Bloemraad in research measuring Canadians’ attitudes towards immigration. Friends of the program may remember him from a lecture he gave in March 2020, in which he explored variations in asylum recognition rates across several countries through the lens of bureaucratic culture.
Dr. Fraser received his Ph.D. in political science at the University of Toronto, with a specialty in comparative politics and public policy. He holds a B.A. in political science from the University of Calgary, as well as M.A.s in political science from the University of British Columbia and Waseda University in Japan. His research focuses on how states attempt to control and manage the long-term impacts of immigration; it also engages questions about how interest groups, agencies, and courts influence policy and public attitudes in these fields. He has received numerous previous research grants, including the SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship.
We are thrilled to welcome Dr. Fraser to Berkeley, and look forward to a productive partnership over the coming year.
Fall 2021 Events Calendar
Canadian Studies is pleased to announce our events schedule for the Fall 2021 semester. To address ongoing health concerns, ​all Fall events will be held virtually or in a hybrid in-person/virtual format using Zoom conferencing. Please note that campus policy requires all participants to have a Zoom account to join meetings. All times posted are Pacific. Event details are subject to change.
Elections Matter: The Politics of Coronavirus in Canada and the United States
September 14 | 12:30 pm | Online | RSVP here
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to have wide-ranging consequences on North American politics. The effect of the virus on Joe Biden’s 2020 win remains debated; meanwhile, Justin Trudeau hopes to use the belated success of his vaccine procurement strategy to win his party a parliamentary majority in the September 20 federal elections. How has COVID-19 shaped electoral politics in Canada and the United States as it relates to crucial recent and ongoing policy choices? Political scientist Daniel Béland, director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada, will address this question while discussing the potential political and policy consequences of the upcoming Canadian elections.
Canadian Family Thanksgiving
October 9 | Information pending
Subject to public health conditions, Canadian Studies and the Digital Moose Lounge hope to welcome friends back for a special Thanksgiving celebration with the Bay Area’s Canadian community. Stay turned for updates!
Book Talk: Making Middle-Class Multiculturalism: Immigration Bureaucrats and Policymaking in Postwar Canada
October 12 | 12:30 pm | Online | RSVP here
In the 1950s and 1960s, immigration bureaucrats played an important yet unacknowledged role in transforming Canada’s immigration policy. Their perceptions and judgements about the admissibility of individuals — in socioeconomic, racial, and moral terms — influenced the creation of formal admissions criteria for skilled workers and family immigrants that continue to shape immigration to Canada. Migration expert Jennifer Elrick (McGill University) will discuss insights gained from her forthcoming book on the topic.
Studying Religious Symbols and Bias in Court Proceedings
November 9 | 12:30 pm | Hybrid | RSVP here
Canadian Studies’ new Sproul Fellow Nicholas A. R. Fraser will discuss some of his own research that examines bias within Canadian judicial procedures against religious minorities. Using his own experimental data, Dr. Fraser will use the example of courtroom oaths as a window into how Canadian cultural expectations can subtly affect an immigrant’s experience of “integration.”
Hildebrand Graduate Research Colloquium
December 7 | 12:30 pm | Hybrid | RSVP here
Learn about the research Canadian Studies funds through our Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowships, as recipients present short overviews of their projects. Participating scholars to be announced soon.
IN THE NEWS
Trudeau Calls Snap Elections for September; Announces Resettlement Plans for Afghan Refugees
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Sunday that he had requested the Governor General to dissolve Parliament, triggering a snap election scheduled for September 20. The move is calculated to bolster Trudeau’s Liberal Party, with polls suggesting that the party may capture enough seats to win a majority government. For the past two years, Trudeau has relied on the support of the opposition to pass his agenda. Some opponents have questioned the wisdom of holding a vote while Canada faces a new wave of COVID; however, federal officials insist the election will be held safely.
Separately, Trudeau reacted Monday to Taliban’s lightning takeover of Afghanistan by announcing that his government would resettle thousands of Afghan refugees in Canada over the coming weeks. Trudeau admitted that his government was surprised by the speed of the Afghan government collapse; nevertheless, in spite of a chaotic situation on the ground, he insisted that Canada will help evacuated over 20,000 Afghans in coordination with the United States and other allies.
Canadian Studies Faculty Affiliate Alison Gopnik Wins Prize for Science Popularization
Berkeley News announced last week that Canadian Studies affiliate Alison Gopnik, a research psychologist specializing in child development, has won the 2021 Carl Sagan Prize for Science Popularization. The prize recognizes researchers who have made a significant contribution to the public’s understanding of science.
Professor Gopnik is the author of several popular books, including The Scientist in the Crib and The Philosophical Baby. Her research explores how young children come to know about the world around them, using the framework that children are constantly testing theories about the world in much the way that scientists do.
Professor Gopnik was born in Philadelphia and raised in Montreal. She obtained her bachelor’s degree from McGill University, and her Ph.D. at Oxford. She taught at the University of Toronto before joining the Berkeley faculty in 1988.
EXTERNAL EVENTS
Meet the Artists: The Chaos Conversation x Primal Impacto
August 19 | 10 am | Webcast | RSVP here
The Consulate General of Canada in San Francisco invites you to attend a Connecting Perspectives “Meet the Artists” virtual event on Thursday, August 19, at 10 am PT.
Connecting Perspectives is a cross-border art initiative produced by the Toronto-based Social Distancing Festival and the Consulate General of Canada in New York. Drawing inspiration from the theme “Art Today,” 26 exceptional artists who identify as Black, Indigenous, and/or People of Colour in Canada and the U.S. were paired and funded to create 13 new, interdisciplinary, collaborative art.
This event will feature artist pairs Kimmy Katarja (Cleveland, OH) and Chancz Perry (Regina, SK), co-creators of The Chaos Conversation, and Deb Leal (Oakland, CA), and Josefina Rodriguez (Calgary, AB), co-creators of Primal Impacto. The event will be moderated by Tawhida Tanya Evanson, with remarks by representatives from the Consulates General of Canada in Detroit and San Francisco.
Royal Canadian Legion Branch 25 90th Anniversary Picnic
August 21 | 12 pm | Richmond, CA | RSVP here
After almost 18 months of virtual events, Royal Canadian Legion Branch 25, representing the San Francisco Bay Area, is hosting a picnic to celebrate their 90th anniversary. Chartered on 12 August 1931, the San Francisco Branch is the sole remaining branch of the 13 branches that once formed the Northern Zone of the Western United States Command of the Royal Canadian Legion.
The picnic will be held at the Marsh Hawk picnic area in the Miller/Knox Regional Shoreline Park. Attendees are asked to bring their own food. The branch will provide beverages for everyone, as well as something sweet and celebratory.
The picnic is open to the public, but guests are asked register in advance. For more information, please visit Branch 25’s website.
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720

A Canadian’s journey to Tokyo via Cal; meet our board; Artist talk & picnic

A newsletter from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.  We also wanted to take the opportunity to thank them for promoting our up-coming 90th anniversary family picnic.


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Happy “August Long Weekend”?
  • Meet Canadian Studies: Board Member Kathleen Thompson Hill
  • A Berkeley athlete’s journey from Canada to Tokyo
  • External event: “Meet the Artists” conversation showcase
  • External event: Royal Canadian Legion Branch 25 90th anniversary picnic
Happy “August Long Weekend?”
Today, people across Canada are enjoying a well-deserved day off. But what holiday are they actually celebrating? The answer, as with many things Canadian, depends on which province you’re in.
Some provinces, including British Columbia, New Brunswick, and Saskatchewan, mark this day as an official celebration of the province. In Alberta, it’s celebrated as “Heritage Day”, recognizing Albertans’ diverse cultural backgrounds. Manitoba honors cancer research activist Terry Fox, while the cities of Toronto and Ottawa commemorate city founders John Graves Simcoe and John By. (And Quebec, Newfoundland, and the Yukon don’t celebrate at all!)
Whatever the official name, most Canadians are just glad to have a long weekend to relax and spend time with the family.
Image: Campsite at Mystic Beach, Vancouver Island. (Michal Klajban, Wikimedia Commons.)
Meet Canadian Studies: Board Member Kathleen Thompson Hill
A Berkeley native, Kathleen Thompson Hill received degrees from U.C. Berkeley and the Sorbonne, followed by a Fellowship in Public Affairs with the Coro Foundation in San Francisco. Eventually, she earned an M.A. in political psychology at Sonoma State University. Kathleen served as executive coordinator of the 25th Anniversary of the United Nations, worked for the Peace Corps and in the White House, and with her husband co-authored three political dictionaries, four law dictionaries, and an Encyclopedia of Federal Agencies and Commissions. She is currently Food and Wine Editor of the Sonoma Index-Tribune. Kathleen collects antique kitchen implements; an exhibition of her collection opens at the Napa Valley Museum later this month.
Excerpts from our interview with Kathleen are below: click here to read the full piece.
What is your connection to Canada?
I am not Canadian, but my husband Gerald and I had a home and lived in Victoria for 15 years and taught at Canadian universities. Out of deep interest in Canada, we researched and wrote papers comparing Canadian and US governmental approaches to environmental, justice, medical, and political systems.
What has your career been like in the US and Canada?
My husband and I taught American politics and government at the University of British Columbia, the University of Victoria, and Sonoma State University. Simultaneously, we were writing guidebooks to wine regions of the west coast of North America. We were awarded UBC prizes for our books on Victoria, Vancouver Island, and the Northwest Wine Country, and received UBC’s Just Desserts Award for “exceptional service to the students.”
How did you get involved with Canadian Studies?
One of the organizations that expressed interest in our papers was the Canadian Studies Program at my alma mater, Berkeley. We got to know {Program founder Tom Barnes} professionally and personally. I was most grateful to have been invited to join the Advisory Board, as I always learn from the many experts who attend and present at our colloquia.
What are your goals as an advisory board member?
I would like to help develop a program to study and present a forum to create greater understanding among the countries of Canada, the U.S., and Mexico about what the three might do to work together on problems we share in these fast-changing times. I would also like to help create programs that attract Canadians and Americans around the Bay Area to participate in what we do and what we offer. To that end, I helped organize Canadian Studies’ first ever wine tasting of Canadian wines this year.
IN THE NEWS
Cal at the Olympics: Mom’s Example Lifts Canadian Camryn Rogers to Her Athletic Dreams
People from Vancouver to Berkeley are cheering on Camryn Rogers, the student athlete representing Canada in women’s hammer throw at the Tokyo Olympics. Born in British Columbia, Camryn swept Canada’s youth circuit before coming to Berkeley for university and joining the Cal Golden Bears. With the assistance of Cal coach Mo Saatara, she broke a collegiate record this spring. And tomorrow, she’ll be trying for a medal in the hammer throw finals after coming in an impressive fourth in yesterday’s qualifying round.
Sports Illustrated’s FanNation profiled Camryn on the eve of the qualifiers Sunday. In a touching joint interview with her mother Shari, Camryn reflects on her mother’s influence on her life and athletic career. She credits her mother, a single parent, with making her the woman she is today. “Watching her make sacrifices, do everything she could… so I could try and achieve everything that I wanted to. I don’t know if I could ever give her enough thanks for that,” says Camryn.
Image: Camryn Rogers ’22. (Cal Athletics Track & Field roster.)
EXTERNAL EVENTS
Meet the Artists: The Chaos Conversation x Primal Impacto
August 19 | 10 am | Webcast | RSVP here
The Consulate General of Canada in San Francisco invites you to attend a Connecting Perspectives “Meet the Artists” virtual event on Thursday, August 19, at 10 am PT.
Connecting Perspectives is a cross-border art initiative produced by the Toronto-based Social Distancing Festival and the Consulate General of Canada in New York. Drawing inspiration from the theme “Art Today,” 26 exceptional artists who identify as Black, Indigenous, and/or People of Colour in Canada and the U.S. were paired and funded to create 13 new, interdisciplinary, collaborative art.
This event will feature artist pairs Kimmy Katarja (Cleveland, OH) and Chancz Perry (Regina, SK), co-creators of The Chaos Conversation, and Deb Leal (Oakland, CA), and Josefina Rodriguez (Calgary, AB), co-creators of Primal Impacto. The event will be moderated by Tawhida Tanya Evanson, with remarks by representatives from the Consulates General of Canada in Detroit and San Francisco.
Royal Canadian Legion Branch 25 90th Anniversary Picnic
August 21 | 12 pm | Richmond, CA | RSVP here
After almost 18 months of virtual events, Royal Canadian Legion Branch 25, representing the San Francisco Bay Area, is hosting a picnic to celebrate their 90th anniversary. Chartered on 12 August 1931, the San Francisco Branch is the sole remaining branch of the 13 branches that once formed the Northern Zone of the Western United States Command of the Royal Canadian Legion.
The picnic will be held at the Marsh Hawk picnic area in the Miller/Knox Regional Shoreline Park. Attendees are asked to bring their own food. The branch will provide beverages for everyone, as well as something sweet and celebratory.
The picnic is open to the public, but guests are asked register in advance. For more information, please visit Branch 25’s website.
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720

An Inuit-Cal connection; border reopening; renewing US-Canada partnership

An item from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements
In this issue:
  • Former program director Nelson Graburn recalls meeting Mary Simon, Canada’s first Indigenous governor general
  • Canadian immigrants in the US: Older, wealthier, and highly educated?
  • In the News: Canada to re-open to vaccinated US visitors August 9
  • External event: Roadmap for a Renewed U.S.-Canada Partnership
Former Program Director Nelson Graburn Recalls Meeting Mary Simon, Canada’s First Indigenous Governor General
Earlier this month, the Inuk leader and diplomat Mary Simon was announced as the 30th governor general of Canada. When she officially takes up the position next week, she will be the first Indigenous person to serve in the role. But while her appointment marked Ms. Simon’s introduction to a larger public, for former Canadian Studies Program Nelson Graburn it was more like hearing the name of an old friend.
A trained anthropologist, Dr. Graburn (called ᐊᐱᖁ  ᓂᓕᓯ, “Apirqu Nilisi” in Inuit) is an expert on Inuit culture and conducted his fieldwork in the Canadian Arctic. In the early ’60s, his research took him to Nunavik, the Inuit territory of northern Quebec, where he first met the future governor-general.
“I used to know Mary Simon and her family quite well,” Dr. Graburn explains. “When I lived I Kujjuak (then known as Fort Chimo) from 1963-64, she was a high school student, very bright, rather shy. I employed her as a translator, particularly for the rather long and technical questionnaires on the project for which I was working.”
“Her father was an American entrepreneur and pilot who set up a hunting camp for rich people down the George River, and his HQ was Kujjuak. His clients flew in from Montreal on First Air, and he flew them out to camp and back. He was married to a local Inuk woman and had four children, the oldest of whom I knew best – Johnny May, a tall red-headed boy who was sent out to stay with his uncle in Colorado to earn his pilot’s license. He returned and worked for his father. Later he became a pilot for First Air when it was bought up by Air Inuit with the proceeds of the (CA$83 million) James Bay Treaty,” (which Ms. Simon had helped negotiate.) “When he flew into communities in the North he was cheerily welcomed as the ‘first Inuit pilot’!”
“Since then I have met Mary Simon on many occasions, usually big conferences where we still exchange words (she’s still bilingual). I really admire her career in Canada and internationally.”
Canadian Immigrants in the US: Older, Wealthier, and Highly Educated?
spotlight article published by the Migration Policy Institute last week profiles the Canadian immigrant population in the United States. Based on census and immigration data, US-resident Canadians are both older and more successful on a number of metrics than both native-born US citizens and other immigrant populations. However, do these sources fully capture the diversity of the Canadian community in the United States?
Census data shows that the Canadian-born population in the US tends to be older than other foreign-born populations, and significantly older the US native-born population, with a median age of 54 (compare 46 for other immigrants and 37 for US natives). Contributing to this high average is the presence of a large population of Canadian retirees. These Canadians are also better-educated than both groups, with 51% possessing a bachelor’s degree (18% more than US-born citizens or other immigrants) and 23% possessing a graduate degree (10% more than either group).
These demographics are reflected in the cities with the highest percentages of Canadian-born residents, which include both business centers and known retirement destinations: a quarter live in the five metro areas of New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Phoenix, and Seattle. 16% of all Canadian immigrants to the US live in California. These factors also contribute to Canadians’ high median household income of $89,000, much more than the $66,000 of US-born householders.
However, Canadian Studies Program director Irene Bloemraad, a noted migration research expert, cautions that identifying Canadians in the United States is difficult. The data do not include US-born Canadians, since they are not immigrants. Also, depending on the data source, naturalized Canadians born outside of North America might or might not be counted. Data from the US Census Bureau tend to rely on place of birth to identify immigrants, a strategy that excludes naturalized Canadians like herself. In contrast, data from US Citizenship and Immigration Services, such as the number of Canadians holding H1-B visas, tend to focus on an applicant’s nationality, not birthplace. Bloemraad says, “The actual Canadian immigrant population in the United States is undoubtedly larger and more diverse. We certainly see this on the Berkeley campus among our Canadian international students and faculty.”
IN THE NEWS
Canada to Re-Open to Vaccinated US Visitors Aug. 9
The Canadian government announced today a dramatic scaling back of its COVID travel restrictions – at least for US residents. Beginning August 9, fully-vaccinated US citizens and permanent residents will no longer need to quarantine for two weeks when visiting Canada. The government is also expanding the number of airports authorized to receive international fights. Adults entering the country will need to provide proof of vaccination, and are still required to complete a COVID-test before arriving in Canada.
Restrictions on travellers from all other countries will to continue through September 7.
EXTERNAL EVENTS
Roadmap for a Renewed U.S.-Canada Partnership
July 23 | 1:30 p.m. ET (10:30 a.m. PT) | Webcast | RSVP here
President Biden and Prime Minister Trudeau agreed on a “Roadmap for a Renewed U.S.-Canada Partnership” on February 23, 2021 at their first “virtual bilateral” meeting. The Roadmap includes a range of action items in six broad areas of cooperation including trade, climate change, COVID-19 response and recovery, and global and regional security issues.
In May, U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken sent veteran diplomat Ambassador Arnold Chacón to Ottawa to serve as Chargé d’Affaires and lead US efforts to advance the Roadmap. The Wilson Center will host Ambassador Chacón and Canada’s Ambassador to the United States Kirsten Hillman for a conversation about the Roadmap agenda and the route ahead for US-Canada relations. The program will be moderated by Canada Institute director and Canadian Studies Program board member, Christopher Sands.
Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley, 213 Moses Hall #2308, Berkeley, CA 94720