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Communities Within: Diversity and Exclusion in Ottawa

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... experienced by Ottawa's visible and ethnic minority communities, in all aspects of life; and ... in a more in-depth fashion qualitative research. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Communities Within: Diversity and Exclusion in Ottawa


1
Communities Within Diversity and Exclusion in
Ottawa
  • Analytical and Conceptual Framework

A project funded by Canadian Heritage -
Immigration and Aboriginal Unit, City of
Ottawa and United Way Ottawa with the
Collaboration of Carleton University
2
Project Objectives
  • To document the nature and extent of social
    exclusion experienced by Ottawas visible and
    ethnic minority communities, in all aspects of
    life and
  • To foster inclusion and social cohesion by
  • empowering minority communities through
    strengthening of voices and by
  • making practical recommendations that seek to
    reverse documented disadvantages

3
Conceptual Framework Social Exclusion and
Marginalization
  • Derived from two bodies of literature
  • Canadian and International literature on Social
    Exclusion and Social Inclusion
  • Canadian literature on the participation of
    minority populations in Canadas economy and
    socio-political processes

4
Social Exclusion
  • Definition
  • Social exclusion is.. an accumulation of
    confluent processes with successive ruptures
    arising from the heart of the economy, politics
    and society, which gradually distances and places
    persons, groups, communities and territories in a
    position of inferiority in relation to centres of
    power, resources and prevailing values.
  • Jordi Estivill -
    STEP program of ILO
  • STEP Strategies and Tools against social
    Exclusion and Poverty program

5
Diverse experiences of exclusionbut common
traits
  • There is no single archetype of exclusion and
    marginalization as a life condition. Many types
    of groups suffer from it, although for different
    reasons and through different processes.
  • Despite such diversity in causes and processes
    that may lead to social exclusion and
    marginalization, we found in the literature a
    remarkable commonality in the broad elements that
    characterize social exclusion, which will help us
    to broadly diagnose the problem.

6
The common traits
  • A multi-dimensional social phenomenon
  • The nature of the relationship between the
    factors or dimensions relate to the severity of
    the condition of exclusion. Dimensions can be
  • just interconnected
  • cumulative and compounding or
  • part of a vicious circle or a spiral of
    disadvantage (Cushing, 2003 Study for Roeher
    Institute)
  • A time-bound, dynamic process, with an origin,
    and both a deterioration and emergence paths
    each instigated by aggravating or alleviation
    stimuli (Estivill 2003)
  • The manifestation of social exclusion is one of a
    varying combinations of material, political and
    social/relational deficiency
  • Is a relative condition, whose various dimensions
    can best be understood relation to another group
    (s).

7
The devil is in the detail
  • Despite a broad consensus on how to characterize
    social exclusion, there is not much of an
    agreement neither on
  • how to measure it or on
  • how to resolve it

8
Application of the Concept
  • Measurement of the phenomenon is fraught with
    problems because of
  • The dynamic nature of exclusion
  • The multiplicity of the factors and their
    interdependencies and lack of clarity on where
    priorities may lie and who ought to define them
  • The idea of process and stages of exclusion
  • The broad field of analysis it is a life-size
    phenomenon

9
Towards Best Practice in Social Exclusion
Concept Application
  • Starting with the experiences of the excluded
  • Grounding the investigation geographically, with
    the geographic unit sharing a common political
    governance (a country, a city) and/or common
    lived experiences (neighborhood)
  • Engaging the excluded in the research process
    (Andrew 2002 Estivill 2003).
  • Not ignoring inequality within the excluded and
    within the included groups (Jensen Levitas)
  • Grounding analysis of exclusion in a clearly
    articulated social transformation vision and
    avoid ideologies (Ruth Levitas 2002 Estivill
    200353)
  • Identifying and studying the excluding agents, be
    they policies, institutions, people (Kunz 2002)
  • The time dimension is accounted for through
    longitudinal studies that take into consideration
    economic cycles, demographic changes and the
    intergeneration transmission of the condition of
    exclusion (Estivill 2003 51)
  • Multi-disciplinary expertise is applied.
  • Given the nascent nature of the concept, any
    application must be tentative and cautionary.

10
Our Application of the Concept of Social
Exclusion
11
Social Exclusion Dissecting the Concept
  • Social Exclusion implicit issues
  • Exclusion from what?
  • Exclusion of whom,?
  • SE in relation to whom?
  • Exclusion by whom?
  • Identifying the Nature of Social Exclusion
  • Determining what qualifies as SE?
  • Describing the causes and process of exclusion,
  • Identifying the interconnection between the
    factors of exclusion
  • Identifying the compounding nature of the factors
    of exclusion through time
  • Describing the human, political, and social
    impacts of exclusion,
  • Identifying perpetuating factors (neighborhood
    disadvantages/advantages, voice, and
    representation)
  • Describing the existence of traps in
    disadvantaged positions and availability of
    political leverage (hope factor?)
  • Measuring the Extent of Social Exclusion
  • Documenting the current conditions of life of
    Visible Minority communities
  • Documenting the current socio-economic gaps
    between racial zed minorities and majority
    groups,
  • Attempting a description of depth/ degrees of
    exclusion for each factor

12
Defining the Boundaries of Exclusion
  • Exclusion of Whom?
  • We will investigate the social exclusion
    experiences of Ottawas visible and ethnic
    minority residents
  • Specific Considerations
  • Visible Minority residents of Ottawa are
    extremely heterogeneous groups and the level of
    heterogeneity varies across sub-categories from
    the Black Community, which is defined by skin
    color, to communities that are essentially
    defined by either ethnicity (like the Chinese),
    region of origin (South East Asians), language
    and history (Arabs), or even by country of origin
    like the Japanese Community.
  • To avoid generalizations, case study methodology
    will be used to study specific communities in a
    more in-depth fashion qualitative research.
  • The selected case study are Canadians of Chinese,
    Somali, and Lebanese ancestry. They are selected
    with a view of representing diverse experiences.

13
..defining the Boundaries of Exclusion
  • Social Exclusion in relation to whom?In relation
    to Ottawas non-visible minority populations.
  • Specific Considerations
  • Non visible minority populations include other
    groups that may also be excluded such as local
    Aboriginal populations residents with
    disabilities, and others.
  • Differences between Francophone and Anglophone in
    terms of access to power, prestige and resources,
    will be acknowledged.

14
Exclusion from What?
  • Discussions of social exclusion of ethnic,
    racial, and cultural minority populations are
    inextricably interwoven with the theories and
    practices of citizenship in a pluralistic,
    democratic society.
  • Citizenship is the common denominator among the
    diverse communities that make up the Canadian
    population (Gilles Paquet Betting on
    Diversity).
  • Substantive citizenship (citizenship by practice)
    ideally affords minority populations the
    opportunities, resources, and partnerships
    necessary to influence the life conditions of
    their communities.

15
Diversity and Exclusion Relating the two bodies
of literature
16
Diversity and Exclusion Relating the two bodies
of literature
  • In order to conceptually organize our learnings
    from the experiences of research participants, we
    have further reviewed two broad areas of
    knowledge, with an eye to the SE literature.
  • Governance and accountability
  • Citizenship theories

17
The Problématique of Diversity(borrowing from
Gilles Paquet)
  • A useful framework to discuss issues that
    underlie the diversity of a given citizenry a
    plural society .
  • Material (resources) and Symbolic order
    (recognition) often the latter underpins the
    first
  • Membership Criteria of membership can be
    defined relationally, on identity-basis, and or
    on culture-basis
  • Belonging in any of the variants of membership
    can be discussed on the ground of a nation,
    ethnicity or through civil society

18
Social Exclusion of Visible Minority Residents of
Ottawa
  • To comprehend the nature of exclusion experienced
    by Ottawas racial and cultural minority
    populations, we will explore the following
    concepts
  • Racialism
  • Classism
  • Gender inequality
  • Social networks and the role of social capital in
    solving life problems
  • Civic participation practices and constraints
  • The role of public institutions, as perceived by
    minority populations

19
Boundaries of Citizenship(Borrowing from Jane
Jensen)
Rights
  • Not only rights but capacity to exercise rights
    meaning
  • Material resources that allow and enable access
  • Opportunities - Recognition and positive symbolic
    identities that underpin inter-group partnerships
    and collective action to negotiate the
    implementation of rights

Belonging a sense of recognition and
accommodation to participate in the economic and
social orders and to enjoy its supports in cases
of need The State plays an essential role in
delimiting the boundaries of belonging
Belonging
Access
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