Histoire Sociale
Volume 52, Issue 105, 2019, Pages 171-192

Welcoming the sick and afflicted: Canada’s tubercular admissions program, 1959-1960 (Article)

Raska J.*
  • a Canadian Museum of Immigration, Pier 21, Halifax, Canada

Abstract

In the 1950s, the United Nations lobbied Canadian officials to help close Europe’s remaining displaced persons camps and resettle “hard core” refugees—individuals who were unsponsored, sick, infirm, or disabled. As part of Canada’s contribution to World Refugee Year (1959-1960), the federal government appeased public demands for a humanitarian response by implementing a special program that brought 325 tubercular refugees and 501 family members to Canada. Despite federal concerns about the financial cost and potential burden on the health care system, the resettlement scheme represented a notable departure from existing immigration policy for unsponsored immigrants with tuberculosis and became an early antecedent to broader reforms in the 1960s. © Histoire sociale / Social History,.

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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85067993522&doi=10.1353%2fhis.2019.0008&partnerID=40&md5=68eeac73b430d8970a1fb05d46be7e78

DOI: 10.1353/his.2019.0008
ISSN: 00182257
Original Language: English