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Aboriginals as Unwilling Immigrants: Contact, Assimilation and Labour Market Outcomes

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Aboriginals as Unwilling Immigrants: Contact, Assimilation and Labour Market Outcomes
Abstract
Like immigrants, aboriginal populations' economic success may be enhanced by the acquisition of skills and traits appropriate to the “majority” culture in which they reside. Using 1991 Canadian Census data, we show that Aboriginal labour market success is greater for Aboriginals whose ancestors intermarried with non-Aboriginals, for those who live off Indian reserves, and for those who live outside the Yukon and Northwest Territories. While these three “facts” could also be explained by a combination of other processes, such as discrimination, physical remoteness, and selection, only the skill/trait acquisition, or “assimilation” hypothesis is consistent with all three.
Publication
Journal of Population Economics
Volume
15
Issue
2
Pages
331-356
Date
May 2002
Journal Abbr
Journal of Population Economics
ISSN
09331433
Short Title
Aboriginals as unwilling immigrants
Accessed
11/28/14, 7:44 PM
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Kuhn, P., & Sweetman, A. (2002). Aboriginals as Unwilling Immigrants: Contact, Assimilation and Labour Market Outcomes. Journal of Population Economics, 15(2), 331–356.