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Lessons from Canada, the first country in the world to adopt multiculturalism as a national policy

by Rex Daniel

  • Pablo Esparza
  • Special for BBC World

Image source, Getty Images

Legend,

What does Canadian multiculturalism look like?

Canada made a pioneering decision in the world in 1971: the adoption of multiculturalism as a state policy. More than 45 years later, cultural diversity is one of the hallmarks of the North American country.

On October 8 of the same year, Pierre Trudeau, Prime Minister, announced to Parliament the establishment of this new political framework.

In 1973, Ottawa created the Ministry of Multiculturalism and, in 1988, this idea became a basic principle of the state through the Multiculturalism Act, which urges to interpret the Canadian constitution from this theoretical framework and to actively promote it.

Unlike states with multicultural or multinational policies, which try to articulate the different cultures of origin of the country, such as Bolivia, whose official name is the Plurinational State of Bolivia, Canadian multiculturalism focused from its origins on the integration of cultures brought by immigrants arriving in the country.

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