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Open Data Foreign-born Population, 2006 - Population Immigrated between 2001 and 2006 (by census division)
The 2006 Census enumerated 6.2 million foreign-born in Canada. The majority of the foreign-born population (86.8%) lived in three provinces: Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia. The map shows the percentage of the total population that was foreign-born by census division that immigrated between...Organization:Natural Resources CanadaResource Formats:- JP2
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Open Data Foreign-born Population, 2006 - Population Immigrated between 2001 and 2006 (by census subdivision)
The 2006 Census enumerated 6.2 million foreign-born in Canada. The majority of the foreign-born population (86.8%) lived in three provinces: Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia. The map shows the percentage of the total population that was foreign-born by census subdivision that immigrated...Organization:Natural Resources CanadaResource Formats:- JP2
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Open Data Foreign-born Population, 2006 - Population Immigrated before 2001 (by census division)
The 2006 Census enumerated 6.2 million foreign-born in Canada. The majority of the foreign-born population (86.8%) lived in three provinces: Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia. The map shows the percentage of the total population that was foreign-born by census division that immigrated before...Organization:Natural Resources CanadaResource Formats:- JP2
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Open Data Foreign-born Population, 2006 - Population Immigrated before 2001 (by census subdivision)
The 2006 Census enumerated 6.2 million foreign-born in Canada. The majority of the foreign-born population (86.8%) lived in three provinces: Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia. The map shows the percentage of the total population that was foreign-born by census subdivision that immigrated...Organization:Natural Resources CanadaResource Formats:- JP2
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Open Data Aboriginal Languages by Community, 1996
The current 50 languages of Canada's indigenous peoples belong to 11 major language families - ten First Nations and Inuktitut. Canada's Aboriginal languages are many and diverse, and their importance to indigenous people immense. This map shows the major aboriginal language families by community...Organization:Natural Resources CanadaResource Formats:- JP2
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Open Data Index of Aboriginal Language Ability, 1996
The Index of Ability compares the number of people who report being able to speak the language with the number who have that Aboriginal language as a mother tongue. The index has been compiled and mapped for each of the Aboriginal communities shown in the map Aboriginal Languages by Community,...Organization:Natural Resources CanadaResource Formats:- JP2
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Open Data Index of Aboriginal Language Continuity, 1996
The Index of Continuity measures language continuity, or vitality, by comparing the number of those who speak a given language at home to the number of those who learned the language as their mother tongue. The index has been compiled and mapped for each of the Aboriginal communities shown in the...Organization:Natural Resources CanadaResource Formats:- JP2
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Open Data English-French Bilingualism, 2001 (by census division)
About 5 231 500 people reported to the 2001 Census that they were bilingual, compared with 4 841 300 five years earlier, an 8.1% increase. In 2001, these individuals represented 17.7% of the population, up from 17.0% in 1996. Nationally, 43.4% of francophones reported that they were bilingual,...Organization:Natural Resources CanadaResource Formats:- JP2
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Open Data English-French Bilingualism, 2001 (by census subdivision)
About 5 231 500 people reported to the 2001 Census that they were bilingual, compared with 4 841 300 five years earlier, an 8.1% increase. In 2001, these individuals represented 17.7% of the population, up from 17.0% in 1996. Nationally, 43.4% of francophones reported that they were bilingual,...Organization:Natural Resources CanadaResource Formats:- JP2
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Open Data Mother Tongue, 2001 - English (by census division)
In the 2001 Census, 22.9% of Canadians had French as their mother tongue, 59.1% English, and 18% neither of the two official languages. Mother tongue is defined as the first language a person learned at home in childhood and still understood at the time of the census. A person with both English...Organization:Natural Resources CanadaResource Formats:- JP2
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