User:Mathieugp/drafts/Language demographics of Canada
This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's work-in-progress page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. For guidance on developing this draft, see Wikipedia:So you made a userspace draft. Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
This article presents the current demolinguistics of Canada.
Overview
[edit]- Population of Canada: 32.2 million (2005)
- Official languages: English and French (de jure)
- Majority group: Anglophone (56.3%)
- Minority groups: Francophone (28.7%), Chinese, Italian, German, Aboriginal languages
Note: The language by mother tongue is always used unless otherwise specified.
Of the 32.2 million citizens of Canada, 17.5 million are native English speakers, 7.7 million are native French-speakers and 5.2 million are native speakers of neither of Canada's two official languages.
Statistics Canada, 2001
- English 17,352,315
- French 7,703,325
- Chinese 853,745
- Italian 469,485
- German 438,080
- Punjabi 271,220
- Spanish 245,500
- Portuguese 213,815
- Polish 208,375
- Arabic 199,940
- Tagalog 174,060
- Ukrainian 148,090
- Dutch 128,670
- Vietnamese 122,055
- Greek 120,365
- Russian 94,555
- Persian 94,095
- Tamil 90,010
- Korean 85,070
- Urdu 80,895
- Hungarian 75,555
- Cree 72,800
- Gujarati 57,555
- Hindi 56,325
- Croatian 54,880
- Romanian 50,895
- Serbian 41,180
- Japanese 34,815
- Bengali 29,505
- Inuktitut 29,005
- Armenian 27,350
- Serbo-Croatian 26,690
- Somali 26,110
- Czech 24,790
- Finnish 22,405
- Ojibway 21,000
- Yiddish 19,295
- Turkish 18,675
- Danish 18,230
- Slovak 17,545
- Macedonian 16,905
- Khmer 15,985
- Lao 12,945
- Slovenian 12,800
- Hebrew 12,435
- Twi 11,070
Language groups
[edit]Anglophones
[edit]Aboriginals
[edit]The 900,000 Aboriginals in Canada (3%) speak 50 different languages. The most important languages still used are Cree, Inuktitut, Ojibway, Innu, and Micmac. A 1996 census revealed that about 67.8% of Aboriginals reported to be native English speakers. Nearly half (47%) of Aboriginal peoples in Quebec reported an Aboriginal language as mother tongue, the highest proportion of any province.
Francophones
[edit]The francophones of Canada numbered some 6.7 million individuals in 2001. 85% of francophones reside in Quebec. There are also French Canadian communities in North and Eastern Ontario and Southern Manitoba, as well as influential communities of Acadians in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. In addition to Canadian-born francophones, numerous French-speaking people from Haiti, Congo, Lebanon, Morocco, Rwanda, Syria, Algeria, France and Belgium have immigrated to Quebec and Francophone Ontario since the 1960s.
Allophones
[edit]Languages other than the official languages are important in Canada, with 5,470,820 people listing a non-official language as a first language. Among the most important non-official first language groups are Chinese (853,745 first-language speakers), especially Cantonese (322,315); Italian (469,485); German (438,080); and Punjabi (271,220).
Phenomenons
[edit]Linguistic transfers
[edit]- Main article: Linguistic transfers in Canada
Interprovincial migrations
[edit]International migrations
[edit]Individual Multilingualism
[edit]Provinces and territories
[edit]The population of Canada being unequally distributed throughout a vast territory, a look at the population of each of its ten provinces and three territories is helpful. The following table details the population of each province and territory by mother tongue.
Province/Territory | Total population | English | French | Other languages |
Ontario | 11,285,550 | 8,079,500 (71.6%) | 493,630 (4.4%) | 2,672,080 (23.7%) |
Québec | 7,506,581 | 450 394 (6.0%) | 6,523,219 (86.9%) | 532,967 (7.1%) |
British Columbia | 3,868,875 | 2,865,300 (74.1%) | 56,100 (1.5%) | 939,945 (24.3%) |
Alberta | 2,941,150 | 2,405,935 (81.8%) | 59,735 (2.0%) | 469,225 (16.0%) |
Manitoba | 1,103,700 | 863,980 (75.8%) | 44,775 (4.1%) | 219,160 (19.9%) |
Saskatchewan | 963,150 | 825,865 (85.7%) | 18,035 (1.9%) | 117,765 (12.2%) |
Nova Scotia | 897,570 | 834,315 (93.0%) | 34,155 (3.8%) | 26,510 (3.0%) |
New Brunswick | 719,710 | 465,720 (64.7%) | 236,775 (32.9%) | 11,935 (1.7%) |
Newfoundland | 508,075 | 500,065 (98.4%) | 2,180 (0.4%) | 5,495 (1.1%) |
Prince Edward Island | 133,385 | 125,215 (93.9%) | 5,670 (4.3%) | 2,065 (1.5%) |
Northwest Territories | 37,105 | 28,985 (78.1%) | 965 (2.6%) | 7,065 (19.0%) |
Yukon | 28,525 | 24,840 (87.1%) | 890 (3.1%) | 2,700 (9.5%) |
Nunavut | 26,665 | 7,370 (27.6%) | 400 (1.5%) | 18,875 (70.8%) |
Legislation
[edit]Federal
[edit]The principles of Bilingualism in Canada are protected in sections 16 to 23 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms which establishes that:
- French and English are equal to each other as official languages;
- Debate in Parliament may take place in either official language;
- Laws shall be printed in both official languages, with equal authority;
- Anyone may deal with any court established by Parliament, in either official language;
- Everyone has the right to receive services from the federal government in his or her choice of official language;
- Members of a minority language group of one of the official languages if learned and still understood (i.e., French speakers in a majority English-speaking province, or vice versa) or received primary school education in that language has the right to have their children receive a public education in their language, where numbers warrant.
Provincial
[edit]Quebec
[edit]Ontario
[edit]New Brunswick
[edit]Nova Scotia
[edit]British Columbia
[edit]Alberta
[edit]Saskatchewan
[edit]Manitoba
[edit]Newfoundland
[edit]Prince Edward Island
[edit]Northwest Territories
[edit]Yukon
[edit]Nunavut
[edit]See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]In English
- Statistics Canada: Canadian Statistics: Population
- Charles Castongay, French is on the ropes. Why won’t Ottawa admit it ?, Policy Options / Options politiques, 20, 8 : 39-50, 1999
- Charles Castongay, Getting the facts straight on French : Reflections following the 1996 Census, in Inroads Journal, volume 8, 1999, pages 57 to 77
- Charles Castongay, Transcript of a Standing Joint Commitee on Official Languages hearing, recorded on April 28, 1998
In French
- Données sociolinguistiques - Table des matières
- Suivi de la situation linguistique
- Indicateurs et dynamique démolinguistiques - 1991, 1996, 2001
- Dynamique des langues - Secrétariat à la politique linguistique du Québec
- Charles Castongay, La force réelle du français au Québec in Le Devoir, December 20, 2005
- Charles Castongay, Assimilation linguistique et remplacement des générations francophones et anglophones au Québec et au Canada in Recherches sociographiques, 2002
- Évolution Démographique des minorités de langue officielle
- Charles Castonguay - Index par auteurs - Vigile.net
- Charles Castonguay - Index par auteurs - L'Action nationale
- Recommandations de Charles Castonguay pour renforcer le français - Extraits du mémoire présenté par Charles Castonguay aux États généraux du français
- Liste des publications récentes de Marc Termote - Département de démographie - Université de Montréal