amid growing media coverage and politicization of immigration issues, concordia university announced wednesday the creation of an institute designed to better understand and help handle migration in quebec and canada.
the institute for research on migration and society (irms) will bring together scholars and researchers in fields including economics, political science, behavioural science and psychology to study how immigrants can best adapt to and augment canadian society, while also examining their needs.
“what we’re trying to do is bring all these different approaches to understanding why people move,” said mireille paquet, director of irms and an associate professor of political science. “what are the best type of interventions we can do to enable more positive migration management and migration relations? but also just to understand this reality, because human migration is an important dynamic of the world. it’s also something that is really affecting a society like canada and a society like quebec.”
global and interprovincial migration has become a hot-button issue nationally and provincially. the federal liberal government, which had steadily increased immigration levels since it took power in 2015, announced in late october
it will dramatically reduce the number of new permanent residents by almost 100,000 people in 2025. the cuts are designed to ease pressures on housing and health-care services, but could also have an impact on employers seeking workers, and on canada’s overall demographic outlook.