Based on original historical tables, Northern Ontario in Historical Statistics, 1871–2021 offers an overview of major long-term population, social composition, employment, and urban concentration trends over 150 years in the region now called “Northern Ontario” (or “Nord de l’Ontario”). David Leadbeater and his collaborators compare Northern Ontario relative to Southern Ontario, as well as detail changes at the district and local levels. They also examine the employment population rate, unemployment, economic dependency, and income distribution, particularly over recent decades of decline since the 1970s.Although deeply experienced by Indigenous peoples, the settler-colonial structure of Northern Ontario’s development plays little explicit analytical role in official government discussions and policy.Northern Ontario in Historical Statistics, 1871–2021, therefore, aims to provide context for the long-standing hinterland colonial question: How do ownership, control, and use of the land and its resources benefit the people who live there?Leadbeater and his collaborators pay special attention to foundational conditions in Northern Ontario’s hinterland-colonial development including Indigenous relative to settler populations, treaty and reserve areas, and provincially controlled “unorganized territories.” Colonial biases in Canadian censuses are discussed critically as a contribution towards decolonizing changes in official statistics.
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Northern Ontario can be understood as a hinterland-colonial region. This book offers an overview and statistical reference source for Northern Ontario on population, employment, and urban concentration since 1871.
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Maps, Tables, and Appendix Maps Tables Appendix Tables 1. Introduction 2. The colonial North of Ontario and official statistics 3. General population increase and decline since 1871 4. Source populations and social composition in the settlement and evolution of Northern Ontario5. The evolution of population and employment across districts in Northern Ontario 6. Urban concentration of population and employment conditions 7. Issues of disparity, distribution, and economic dependency in Northern Ontario 8. Conclusion Appendix: Supplemental Tables Table Notes and Data Sources Table 1: Treaty and Reserve areas in Northern Ontario, 2019 Table 2: Population, land, and census divisions of Ontario, Northern and Southern, census dates, 1871-2016 Table 4: Indigenous populations in Northern Ontario as enumerated by Census of Canada, census dates, 1871, 1881, 1901-1971, 2016 Table 8: Birthplaces of the population in Northern Ontario and Southern Ontario, decennial census dates, 1871-2011 Table 11: Population by marital status and sex in Northern Ontario and Southern Ontario, decennial census dates, 1871-2011Table 12: Population by national origin in Northern Ontario and Southern Ontario, decennial census dates, 1871-2011 Table 13: Estimates of official languages spoken in Northern Ontario and Ontario, decennial census dates, 1871-1931Table 14: Official languages spoken in Northern Ontario and Southern Ontario, decennial census dates, 1931-2011 Table 19: Employment by sex in Northern Ontario districts, census dates, 1951-2011 Table 21: Unemployment and unemployed rates by sex in Northern Ontario and districts, census dates, 1951-2016 Table 22: Full-time and part-time employment by sex in Northern Ontario and Ontario, census dates, 1981-2016 Table 24: Northern Ontario city populations and changes, census dates, 1971-2016
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It is a deep dive into population changes in the north over the past century. It is a bleak picture of the decades of struggle to find sustainability in the great northland. A roadmap of economic underdevelopment, social stagnation and outmigration.For academics and researchers, the breakdown of the numbers will no doubt be helpful. But what gives this work value is that it interprets the data through a political lens.
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The only reference source for Northern Ontario for data on population, employment, and urban concentration for most decades spanning 1871-2021
This study aims to provide an overview of major population, employment, social composition, and urban concentration trends since 1871 in the region now called “Northern Ontario” (or “Nord de l’Ontario” or “Ontario-Nord”). The study pays special attention to the pattern of decline in population and employment that has been occurring in the last several decades not only in aggregate, but also at the district and community levels. The study raises some structural issues of economic development underlying the labour market and distributional disparities described as well as discusses certain measurement issues particularly related to economic dependency.[A1] More detailed analysis of the economic conditions of decline is beyond the present task. Nor is the study focused on immediate policy issues but rather on contributing to a deeper empirical basis for policy discussion. To heighten the importance of the larger trends treated here for policy, the study will refer to some aspects of current dominant policy thinking, such as in the Province’s Growth Plan for Northern Ontario (2011) and some publications of the provincially funded Northern Policy Institute. The early development of Northern Ontario occurred in the context of a vast Canadian colonial expansion in territory and settlement westward and northward, particularly following Canadian transcontinental railway development from the 1880s. As established at Confederation (1867), the then province of Ontario occupied a smaller territory of about 263, 000 km2 above the St Lawrence River and Lakes Ontario, Erie, Huron, and Superior (Map 1). But by 1912, when Ontario’s boundaries reached their current limits, the province had more than tripled its size to over 900, 000 km2, most being through colonial expansion into Northern Ontario.This territorial and settlement expansion was based mainly in southern Ontario and grew out of its earlier colonization. Northern Ontario came to cover approximately 87 percent of the land area of Ontario (Table 2 data). Typical of settler colonial place-naming patterns, the area was also called “New Ontario” (or “Nouvel-Ontario”) . This study uses the term “Northern Ontario” (or “Nord de l’Ontario”) reflecting more contemporary common terms. The process of defining the region of Northern Ontario has been a matter of contention. For purposes of the present study, we need to address particularly the issue of the southeastern boundary, which has been imposed in different forms for purposes of governmental administration and programs, and never negotiated with Indigenous peoples. There is wide acceptance that today Northern Ontario includes at least nine territorial districts: Algoma, Cochrane, Kenora, Manitoulin, Nipissing, Rainy River, Sudbury, Thunder Bay, and Timiskaming. For official statistical purposes, these unincorporated districts are also census divisions, except for Sudbury, which has been divided into two census divisions (Sudbury District and Greater Sudbury), thus making ten census divisions (Map 2).[2] This ten-census division definition of Northern Ontario is fairly consistent with much popular discussion which takes the southernmost boundary to be the westward-flowing French River, from its mouth on Lake Huron (Georgian Bay) through to Lake Nipissing then to the eastward-flowing Mattawa River from North Bay through to Mattawa on the Ottawa River.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780776641676
Publisert
2024-09-17
Utgiver
Vendor
University of Ottawa Press
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Forfatter
Series edited by

Biographical note

David Leadbeater (Author)
David Leadbeater , Ph.D., was raised in BC and Alberta. He taught in the Economics Department at Laurentian University from 1989 until 2021. His teaching and research interests are in the economic development of Canada, urban and regional economics, labour economics, and colonialism and economic theory. He holds degrees from the University of Alberta, Oxford University, and the University of Toronto. He is the editor of Resources, Empire and Labour: Crises, Lessons and Alternatives and Mining Town Crisis: Globalization, Labour and Resistance in Sudbury.