Environment and Planning A
Volume 38, Issue 9, 2006, Pages 1653-1671

The Canadian Hispanic Day Parade, or how Latin American immigrants practise (sub)urban citizenship in Toronto (Article)

Veronis L.*
  • a Department of Geography, University of Toronto, Sidney Smith Hall, 100 St George Street, Toronto, Ont. M5S 3G3, Canada, Department of Geography, University of Ottawa, Simard Hall, Ottawa, Ont. KIN 6N5, Canada

Abstract

In this paper I explore immigrants' notions and practices of citizenship, and how these contribute to the citizenship debate. In order to achieve this, I examine Latin American immigrants' struggle for belonging in Toronto by looking at the Canadian Hispanic Day Parade. This multicultural celebration of ethnic diversity takes place in a marginalized suburban neighbourhood of the city, and I argue that Latin Americans use it to affirm the existence of a Latin American identity and community in Toronto. But, while the parade serves to contest dominant representations of immigrants, visible minorities, and the disadvantaged, it also reveals how forms of community mobilization can internalize neoliberal social relations and even promote a neoliberal agenda. The aim of the paper is to reflect upon the political potential of ethnic celebrations, as well as the constraints and complexities of immigrant citizenship practice within the contemporary context of Canadian multiculturalism and neoliberalism.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

Canada urban area immigrant Toronto multiculturalism ethnicity cultural tradition neoliberalism citizenship Ontario [Canada] suburban area North America

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33845686330&doi=10.1068%2fa37413&partnerID=40&md5=5954f6e617e05c3256d5ef489cffc7e4

DOI: 10.1068/a37413
ISSN: 0308518X
Cited by: 37
Original Language: English