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Are Canadians really open to more migration in the future?

Canada’s embrace of territorial closure during the COVID-19 pandemic has coincided with a spike in xenophobia and racism.

Are Canadians really open to more migration in the future?
Closed store at Square One Shopping Center in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, 28 Nov. 2020 | Zou Zheng/Xinhua News Agency/PA Images. All rights reserved
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With COVID-19 disrupting travel, shutting borders, and redefining what is essential work, Pandemic Borders explores what international migration will look like after the pandemic, in this series titled #MigrantFutures

How are we to make sense of Canadian immigration policymaking during the COVID-19 pandemic? On the one hand, the Trudeau government has pledged to increase both its already ambitious admissions target for 2020 and its annual immigration levels in the next three years. The government’s expansive immigration strategy has earned the praise of immigration boosters while generating little in the way of skepticism (let alone criticism) from opposition parties. For the most part, public opinion has also fallen into line. Yet, paradoxically, the Government of Canada’s open approach to migration of all kinds has been marked by unprecedented territorial closure.