Recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "Canadian experiences"

How are Canada's most recent immigrants coping with our workforce's need for "Canadian experience?" And how do community networks and federal initiatives impact newcomers during their periods of settlement? Through an examination of volunteer interactions at Vancouver Community N...

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Main Author: Dechief, Diane Yvonne
Format: Others
Published: 2006
Online Access:http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/9042/1/MR20677.pdf
Dechief, Diane Yvonne <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Dechief=3ADiane_Yvonne=3A=3A.html> (2006) Recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "Canadian experiences". Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMG.90422013-10-22T03:46:14Z Recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "Canadian experiences" Dechief, Diane Yvonne How are Canada's most recent immigrants coping with our workforce's need for "Canadian experience?" And how do community networks and federal initiatives impact newcomers during their periods of settlement? Through an examination of volunteer interactions at Vancouver Community Network (VCN), this thesis responds to both of these questions. It demonstrates how this charitable internet service provider offers opportunities for individual newcomers to broaden their technical and communication skills as well as their social networks, while contributing to the enhancement of social inclusion at VCN. Recent immigrants are established as a technically savvy "alternate civic core," and indeed major contributors to VCN's volunteer program. Based on research conducted in Vancouver during the Spring and Summer of 2005, this thesis incorporates both ethnographic and quantitative methodologies. Findings are analyzed and contextualized by theories from the fields of community informatics (e.g. Gurstein, 2004; Warschauer, 2003), and immigration studies (e.g. Kunz, 2003; Mwarigha, 2002). Further support is drawn from recent scholarship examining relationships between social capital, social inclusion and the use of ICTs (Caidi & Allard, 2005; Scott-Dixon, 2004). Studying the volunteer contributions of recent immigrants to VCN is valuable because it amplifies volunteers' reflections on gaining "Canadian experience" and broadens awareness of their contributions through civic participation. This thesis concludes that in Canada, a country where immigration and the economy are functionally intertwined, placing the onus of becoming employable on individual immigrants is increasingly ineffective. Recommendations for further efforts to combine the needs of individuals and their communities with federal policies are proposed 2006 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/9042/1/MR20677.pdf Dechief, Diane Yvonne <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Dechief=3ADiane_Yvonne=3A=3A.html> (2006) Recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "Canadian experiences". Masters thesis, Concordia University. http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/9042/
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description How are Canada's most recent immigrants coping with our workforce's need for "Canadian experience?" And how do community networks and federal initiatives impact newcomers during their periods of settlement? Through an examination of volunteer interactions at Vancouver Community Network (VCN), this thesis responds to both of these questions. It demonstrates how this charitable internet service provider offers opportunities for individual newcomers to broaden their technical and communication skills as well as their social networks, while contributing to the enhancement of social inclusion at VCN. Recent immigrants are established as a technically savvy "alternate civic core," and indeed major contributors to VCN's volunteer program. Based on research conducted in Vancouver during the Spring and Summer of 2005, this thesis incorporates both ethnographic and quantitative methodologies. Findings are analyzed and contextualized by theories from the fields of community informatics (e.g. Gurstein, 2004; Warschauer, 2003), and immigration studies (e.g. Kunz, 2003; Mwarigha, 2002). Further support is drawn from recent scholarship examining relationships between social capital, social inclusion and the use of ICTs (Caidi & Allard, 2005; Scott-Dixon, 2004). Studying the volunteer contributions of recent immigrants to VCN is valuable because it amplifies volunteers' reflections on gaining "Canadian experience" and broadens awareness of their contributions through civic participation. This thesis concludes that in Canada, a country where immigration and the economy are functionally intertwined, placing the onus of becoming employable on individual immigrants is increasingly ineffective. Recommendations for further efforts to combine the needs of individuals and their communities with federal policies are proposed
author Dechief, Diane Yvonne
spellingShingle Dechief, Diane Yvonne
Recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "Canadian experiences"
author_facet Dechief, Diane Yvonne
author_sort Dechief, Diane Yvonne
title Recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "Canadian experiences"
title_short Recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "Canadian experiences"
title_full Recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "Canadian experiences"
title_fullStr Recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "Canadian experiences"
title_full_unstemmed Recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "Canadian experiences"
title_sort recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "canadian experiences"
publishDate 2006
url http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/9042/1/MR20677.pdf
Dechief, Diane Yvonne <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Dechief=3ADiane_Yvonne=3A=3A.html> (2006) Recent immigrants as an "alternate civic core" : providing internet services, gaining "Canadian experiences". Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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