1. Skill, Migration and Gender in Australia and Canada: The Case of Gender-based Analysis.
- Author
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Boucher, Anna
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *GENDER inequality , *ECONOMISTS , *SAVINGS , *ECONOMICS , *GENDER , *ANDROGYNY (Psychology) - Abstract
The shift away from family immigration and towards skilled immigration is one of the most important changes over the past decade in Australian immigration policy. Yet the implications of this shift for female applicants have remained largely unexplored. Skilled immigration has slipped by as a genderless story in which the androgynous skilled migrant is the central character and economists do most of the storytelling. This paper discusses the gender equality concerns raised by the policy shift towards skilled immigration. It argues that Australia's skilled immigration scheme disadvantages female applicants through its construction both of economic independence and 'skill.' A comparison with Canada's skilled migration law and regulations, which are audited by gender mainstreaming tools, is considered to ascertain what role, if any, gender-based analysis plays in identifying and rectifying the potential gender inequalities produced by skilled immigration selection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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