Understanding of the history of the Canadian census. The use of census data throught Canadian history. The effects of changing census data methods.
Objective: Objective: Understanding the following: what a national census is; the history of the Canadian national census; effects of changes to the the 2010 long form; suvey vs census; where we are and what do we have in May 2011. Methods: lecture and presentation Results: increase awareness of what comprises census data and how it is used by Canadians (individuals, researchers, business, governments, libraries who serve these users) Conclusions: If the Census 2011 is vastly different from previous national census', what alternative resources are available for libraries and their users?
Description: The long form census was changed in the summer of 2010 to a long form survey. What are the long term effects of this change for Canadians (individuals, researchers, business, governments, libraries) who use census data.
This is what is left of the Canadian Census. The long-form census was cancelled by the Harper Conservative Government in the summer of 2010. The other remaining compulsory Census is the Agricultural and it is very long. Some have suggested that cow manure might rank higher in important to this Government This is what is left of the Canadian Census. The long-form census was cancelled by the Harper Conservative Government in the summer of 2010. The other remaining compulsory Census is the Agricultural and it is very long. Some have suggested that cow manure might be considered more important to this Government than population.
This is what is left of the Canadian Census. The long-form census was cancelled by the Harper Conservative Government in the summer of 2010. The other remaining compulsory Census is the Agricultural and it is very long. Some have suggested that cow manure might rank higher in important to this Government This is what is left of the Canadian Census. The long-form census was cancelled by the Harper Conservative Government in the summer of 2010. The other remaining compulsory Census is the Agricultural and it is very long. Some have suggested that cow manure might be considered more important to this Government than population.
This covers what a population pyramid is, and how to analyze one. It covers the three basic shapes and how they correspond to population growth or decline. Finally, students analyze pyramids of US cities based on unique trends (ie; an aging population in a retirement community).
Abstract:
Ms. Tracey P. Lauriault discusses neighbourhood scale research using Census data. She introduces the The Cybercartographic Pilot Atlas of the Risk of Homelessness created at the Geomatics and Cartographic Research and will feature community based research used to inform public policy as part of the Canadian Social Data Strategy (CSDS) . She features maps and data about social issues in Canadian cities & metropolitan areas (e.g. Calgary, Toronto, Halton, Sault Ste. Marie, Hamilton, Ottawa, Montreal, & others) and focuses on the importance of local analysis and what the loss of the Long-Form Census could mean to evidence based decision making to communities in Canada’s. She will also discuss issues surrounding the cancellation of the long-form census in Canada.
Who:
Tracey P. Lauriault is a researcher at the Geomatics and Cartographic Research Centre at Carleton University and is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies. She participates in activities and represents the GCRC on topics related to the access to and the preservation of Data. She was the Research Leader for the Pilot Atlas of the Risk of Homelessness funded by HRSDC, part of the Project Management Team for the Cybercartography and the New Economy Project responsible for collaboration, transdisciplinary research, organizational theory and lead researcher of the Cybercartographic Atlas of Antarctica Case Study for the International Research on Permanent Authentic Records in Electronic Systems (InterPARES) 2 and General Study of Archival Policies of Science Data Archives/Repositories.
Currently, she is working on the Canadian Social Data Strategy a project of Canadian Council on Social Development as a Research Associate with Acacia Consulting and Research. Her PhD dissertation is on mapping data access discourses in Canada. She is co-founder of CivicAccces.ca, ogWiFi.ca and co-author of datalibre.ca which hosts Census Watch.
Government policies - Indigenous Affairs (First Nations) - Canada - Septembe...paul young cpa, cga
All governments make promises they will be better when it comes to government. This presentation looks at first nations including the election promises made by the Liberals during the 2015 election campaign.
the internet from military technology to networked utopia .docxarnoldmeredith47041
the internet: from military
technology to networked utopia
Sutter’s Mill
-Coloma, California.
-site where gold was initially discovered, which
subsequently set off the California Gold Rush in 1848.
Sutter’s Mill
-Coloma, California.
-site where gold was initially discovered, which
subsequently set off the California Gold Rush in 1848.
-estimated population of San Francisco in 1848: 800
-estimated population of San Francisco in 1850: 21,000
-during James K. Polk’s presidency, the concept
of Manifest Destiny became popular. in 1845,
the New York Democratic Review wrote:
“our manifest destiny to overspread the
continent allotted by Providence for the free
development of our yearly multiplying millions.”
-during James K. Polk’s presidency, the concept
of Manifest Destiny became popular. in 1845,
the New York Democratic Review wrote:
“our manifest destiny to overspread the
continent allotted by Providence for the free
development of our yearly multiplying millions.”
-in 1846, Senator Thomas Hart Benton said:
“it would seem that the White race alone received the
divine command, to subdue and replenish the earth, for
it is the only race that has obeyed it—the only race that
hunts out new and distant lands, and even a New
World, to subdue and replenish.”
-the concept of California
itself is still centered on
the ideas of those original
“49ers”: new wealth,
western expansion, and
unlimited potentiality—a
type of utopia.
Mark Cuban: early investor in broadcast.com, which
broadcast the first livestream of the Victoria’s Secret
fashion show in 1999. the company was sold to Yahoo!
later that year for $5.7 billion in stock.
-the people who made the most money during the
California Gold Rush weren’t the prospectors, but instead
where the people providing the supplies, housing, and food
to the prospectors.
-the migration out to the Gold Rush provoked deadly
confrontations with Native Americans that led to the
Apache Wars, which lasted from 1849 to 1886. these
conflicts led to thousands of deaths.
-in 1850 California passed the Foreign Miners’ Tax, which
burdened all non-native born Americans (mostly Chinese
and Japanese) with a $20 ($600 in 2019) monthly tax for
each foreigner engaged in mining.
ARPANET technology (1970)
Apollo 11, America’s (and the world’s)
first moon landing (1969).
Apollo 11, America’s (and the world’s)
first moon landing (1969).
Apollo 11, America’s (and the world’s)
first moon landing (1969).
the “Space Race” between the communist USSR and
the capitalist United States was set off by the USSR’s
success in launching Sputnik, the first artificial Earth
Satellite in 1957.
IBM 360 mainframe computer, 1964
mainframe computers
work to transfer desired
data in real time.
-mainframes don’t render
or originate new data like
a supercomputer does.
U.S. Department of Defense’s,
Advanced Research Projects Agency,
1.
Série de webinaires sur le gouvernement ouvert du Canada
L'équipe du #GouvOuvert est de retour avec un nouveau webinaire le 28 novembre! Nous allons discuter au sujet des #coulisses des #donnéesouvertes au avec la professeure
@TraceyLauriault
de
@Carleton_U
et
@JaimieBoyd
. Inscrivez-vous maintenant: http://ow.ly/UQvu50xabIb
Week 13 (Apr. 8) – Assemblages, Genealogies and Dynamic Nominalism
Course description:
The emphasis is to learn to envision data genealogically, as a social and technical assemblages, as infrastructure and reframe them beyond technological conceptions. During the term we will explore data, facts and truth; the power of data both big and small; governmentality and biopolitics; risk, probability and the taming of chance; algorithmic culture, dynamic nominalism, categorization and ontologies; the translation of people, space and social phenomena into and by data and software and the role of data in the production of knowledge.
This class format is a graduate MA seminar and a collaborative workshop. We will work with Ottawa Police Services and critically examine the socio-technological data assemblage of that institution. This includes a fieldtrip to the Elgin street station; a tour of the 911 Communication Centre and we will meet with data experts.
April 4, 2019, 17:30-19:30
IOG's Policy Crunch
Disruptive Innovation and Public Policy in the Digital Age event series
The Global Race in Digital Governance
https://iog.ca/events/the-global-race-in-digital-governance/
This covers what a population pyramid is, and how to analyze one. It covers the three basic shapes and how they correspond to population growth or decline. Finally, students analyze pyramids of US cities based on unique trends (ie; an aging population in a retirement community).
Abstract:
Ms. Tracey P. Lauriault discusses neighbourhood scale research using Census data. She introduces the The Cybercartographic Pilot Atlas of the Risk of Homelessness created at the Geomatics and Cartographic Research and will feature community based research used to inform public policy as part of the Canadian Social Data Strategy (CSDS) . She features maps and data about social issues in Canadian cities & metropolitan areas (e.g. Calgary, Toronto, Halton, Sault Ste. Marie, Hamilton, Ottawa, Montreal, & others) and focuses on the importance of local analysis and what the loss of the Long-Form Census could mean to evidence based decision making to communities in Canada’s. She will also discuss issues surrounding the cancellation of the long-form census in Canada.
Who:
Tracey P. Lauriault is a researcher at the Geomatics and Cartographic Research Centre at Carleton University and is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies. She participates in activities and represents the GCRC on topics related to the access to and the preservation of Data. She was the Research Leader for the Pilot Atlas of the Risk of Homelessness funded by HRSDC, part of the Project Management Team for the Cybercartography and the New Economy Project responsible for collaboration, transdisciplinary research, organizational theory and lead researcher of the Cybercartographic Atlas of Antarctica Case Study for the International Research on Permanent Authentic Records in Electronic Systems (InterPARES) 2 and General Study of Archival Policies of Science Data Archives/Repositories.
Currently, she is working on the Canadian Social Data Strategy a project of Canadian Council on Social Development as a Research Associate with Acacia Consulting and Research. Her PhD dissertation is on mapping data access discourses in Canada. She is co-founder of CivicAccces.ca, ogWiFi.ca and co-author of datalibre.ca which hosts Census Watch.
Government policies - Indigenous Affairs (First Nations) - Canada - Septembe...paul young cpa, cga
All governments make promises they will be better when it comes to government. This presentation looks at first nations including the election promises made by the Liberals during the 2015 election campaign.
the internet from military technology to networked utopia .docxarnoldmeredith47041
the internet: from military
technology to networked utopia
Sutter’s Mill
-Coloma, California.
-site where gold was initially discovered, which
subsequently set off the California Gold Rush in 1848.
Sutter’s Mill
-Coloma, California.
-site where gold was initially discovered, which
subsequently set off the California Gold Rush in 1848.
-estimated population of San Francisco in 1848: 800
-estimated population of San Francisco in 1850: 21,000
-during James K. Polk’s presidency, the concept
of Manifest Destiny became popular. in 1845,
the New York Democratic Review wrote:
“our manifest destiny to overspread the
continent allotted by Providence for the free
development of our yearly multiplying millions.”
-during James K. Polk’s presidency, the concept
of Manifest Destiny became popular. in 1845,
the New York Democratic Review wrote:
“our manifest destiny to overspread the
continent allotted by Providence for the free
development of our yearly multiplying millions.”
-in 1846, Senator Thomas Hart Benton said:
“it would seem that the White race alone received the
divine command, to subdue and replenish the earth, for
it is the only race that has obeyed it—the only race that
hunts out new and distant lands, and even a New
World, to subdue and replenish.”
-the concept of California
itself is still centered on
the ideas of those original
“49ers”: new wealth,
western expansion, and
unlimited potentiality—a
type of utopia.
Mark Cuban: early investor in broadcast.com, which
broadcast the first livestream of the Victoria’s Secret
fashion show in 1999. the company was sold to Yahoo!
later that year for $5.7 billion in stock.
-the people who made the most money during the
California Gold Rush weren’t the prospectors, but instead
where the people providing the supplies, housing, and food
to the prospectors.
-the migration out to the Gold Rush provoked deadly
confrontations with Native Americans that led to the
Apache Wars, which lasted from 1849 to 1886. these
conflicts led to thousands of deaths.
-in 1850 California passed the Foreign Miners’ Tax, which
burdened all non-native born Americans (mostly Chinese
and Japanese) with a $20 ($600 in 2019) monthly tax for
each foreigner engaged in mining.
ARPANET technology (1970)
Apollo 11, America’s (and the world’s)
first moon landing (1969).
Apollo 11, America’s (and the world’s)
first moon landing (1969).
Apollo 11, America’s (and the world’s)
first moon landing (1969).
the “Space Race” between the communist USSR and
the capitalist United States was set off by the USSR’s
success in launching Sputnik, the first artificial Earth
Satellite in 1957.
IBM 360 mainframe computer, 1964
mainframe computers
work to transfer desired
data in real time.
-mainframes don’t render
or originate new data like
a supercomputer does.
U.S. Department of Defense’s,
Advanced Research Projects Agency,
1.
Série de webinaires sur le gouvernement ouvert du Canada
L'équipe du #GouvOuvert est de retour avec un nouveau webinaire le 28 novembre! Nous allons discuter au sujet des #coulisses des #donnéesouvertes au avec la professeure
@TraceyLauriault
de
@Carleton_U
et
@JaimieBoyd
. Inscrivez-vous maintenant: http://ow.ly/UQvu50xabIb
Week 13 (Apr. 8) – Assemblages, Genealogies and Dynamic Nominalism
Course description:
The emphasis is to learn to envision data genealogically, as a social and technical assemblages, as infrastructure and reframe them beyond technological conceptions. During the term we will explore data, facts and truth; the power of data both big and small; governmentality and biopolitics; risk, probability and the taming of chance; algorithmic culture, dynamic nominalism, categorization and ontologies; the translation of people, space and social phenomena into and by data and software and the role of data in the production of knowledge.
This class format is a graduate MA seminar and a collaborative workshop. We will work with Ottawa Police Services and critically examine the socio-technological data assemblage of that institution. This includes a fieldtrip to the Elgin street station; a tour of the 911 Communication Centre and we will meet with data experts.
April 4, 2019, 17:30-19:30
IOG's Policy Crunch
Disruptive Innovation and Public Policy in the Digital Age event series
The Global Race in Digital Governance
https://iog.ca/events/the-global-race-in-digital-governance/
March 25, 2019, 9:30 AM
International Meeting of NAICS code Experts
Statistics Canada
Simon Goldberg Room, RH Coats building
100 Tunney’s Pasture Driveway
With research contributions by Ben Wright, Carleton University and Dustin Moores, University of Ottawa
Presented at the:
Canadian Aviation Safety Collaboration Forum
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)
Montreal, QC
January 23, 2019
This presentation was made in real-time while attending the Forum. The objective was to observe and listen, and share some examples outside of this community that may provide insight about data sharing models with a focus on governance.
From Aspiration to Reality: Open Smart Cities
Open smart cities might become a reality for Canada. Globally there are a number of initiatives, programs, and practices that are open smart city like which means that it is possible to have an open, responsive and engaged city that is both socio-technologically enabled, but also one where there is receptivity to and a willingness to grow a critically informed type of technological citizenship (Feenberg). For an open smart city to exist, public officials, the private sector, scholars, civil society and residents and citizens require a definition and a guide to start the exercise of imagining what an open smart city might look like. There is much critical scholarship about the smart city and there are many counter smart city narratives, but there are few depictions of what engagement, participatory design and technological leadership might be. The few examples that do exist are project based and few are systemic. An open smart city definition and guide was therefore created by a group of stakeholders in such a way that it can be used as the basis for the design of an open smart city from the ground up, or to help actors shape or steer the course of emerging or ongoing data and networked urbanist forms (Kitchin) of smart cities to lead them towards being open, engaged and receptive to technological citizenship.
This talk will discuss some of the successes resulting from this Open Smart Cities work, which might also be called a form or engaged scholarship. For example the language for the call for tender of the Infrastructure Canada Smart City Challenge was modified to include as a requisite that engagement and openness be part of the submissions from communities. Also, those involved with the guide have been writing policy articles that critique either AI or the smart city while also offering examples of what is possible. These articles are being read by proponents of Sidewalk Labs in Toronto. Also, the global Open Data Conference held in Argentina in September of 2018 hosted a full workshop on Open Smart Cities and finally Open North is working toward developing key performance indicators to assess those shortlisted by Infrastructure Canada and to help those communities develop an Open Smart Cities submission. The objective of the talk is to demonstrate that it is actually possible to shift public policy on large infrastructure projects, at least, in the short term.
This week we will learn about user generated content (UGC), citizen science, crowdsourcing & volunteered geographic information (VGI). We will also discuss divergent views on data humanitarianism.
Cottbus Brandenburg University of Technology Lecture series on Smart RegionsCritically Assembling Data, Processes & Things: Toward and Open Smart CityJune 5, 2018
This lecture will critically focus on smart cities from a data based socio-technological assemblage approach. It is a theoretical and methodological framework that allows for an empirical examination of how smart cities are socially and technically constructed, and to study them as discursive regimes and as a large technological infrastructural systems.
The lecture will refer to the research outcomes of the ERC funded Programmable City Project led by Rob Kitchin at Maynooth University and will feature examples of empirical research conducted in Dublin and other Irish cities.
In addition, the lecture will discuss the research outcomes of the Canadian Open Smart Cities project funded by the Government of Canada GeoConnections Program. Examples will be drawn from five case studies namely about the cities of Edmonton, Guelph, Ottawa and Montreal, and the Ontario Smart Grid as well as number of international best practices. The recent Infrastructure Canada Canadian Smart City Challenge and the controversial Sidewalk Lab Waterfront Toronto project will also be discussed.
It will be argued that no two smart cities are alike although the technological solutionist and networked urbanist approaches dominate and it is suggested that these kind of smart cities may not live up to the promise of being better places to live.
In this lecture, the ideals of an Open Smart City are offered instead and in this kind of city residents, civil society, academics, and the private sector collaborate with public officials to mobilize data and technologies when warranted in an ethical, accountable and transparent way in order to govern the city as a fair, viable and livable commons that balances economic development, social progress and environmental responsibility. Although an Open Smart City does not yet exist, it will be argued that it is possible.
Conference of Irish Geographies 2018
The Earth as Our Home
Automating Homelessness May 12, 2018
The research for these studies is funded by a European Research Council Advanced Investigator award ERC-2012-AdG-323636-SOFTCITY.
Presentation #2:Open/Big Urban DataLessons Learned from the Programmable City ProjectMansion House, Dublin, May 9th, 201810am-2pmhttp://progcity.maynoothuniversity.ie/2018/03/lessons-for-smart-cities-from-the-programmable-city-project/
Financé par : GéoConnexions
Dirigé par : Nord Ouvert
Le noyau de l’équipe :
Rachel Bloom et Jean-Noé Landry, Nord Ouvert
Dr Tracey P. Lauriault, Carleton University
David Fewer, Clinique d’intérêt public et de politique d’Internet du Canada (CIPPIC)
Dr Mark Fox, University of Toronto
Assistant et assistante de recherche, Carleton University
Carly Livingstone
Stephen Letts
Open Smart City in Canada Project
Funded by: GeoConnections
Lead by: OpenNorth
Project core team:
Rachel Bloom & Jean-Noe Landry, Open North
Dr. Tracey P. Lauriault, Carleton University
David Fewer, LL.M., Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC)
Dr. Mark Fox, University of Toronto
Research Assistants Carleton University
Carly Livingstone
Stephen Letts
Introductory remarks
- Jean-Noe Landry, Executive Director, Open North
Webinar 2 includes:
- Summary of Webinar 1: E-Scan and Assessment of Smart -
Cities in Canada (listen at: http://bit.ly/2yp7H8k )
- Situating smart cities amongst current digital practices
- Towards guiding principles for Open Smart Cities
- Examples of international best practices from international cities
- Observations & Next Steps
Webinar Presenters:
- Rachel Bloom, Open North
- Dr Tracey P. Lauriault, School of Journalism and Communication, Carleton University
Content Contributors:
- David Fewer CIPPIC,
- Mark Fox U. of Toronto,
- Stephen Letts (RA Carleton U.)
Project Name:
- Open Smart Cities in Canada
Date:
- December 14, 2017
Canada is a data and technological society. There is no sector that is uninformed by data or unmediated by code, algorithms, software and infrastructure. Consider the Internet of Things (IoT), smart cities, and precision agriculture; or smart fisheries, forestry, and energy and of course governing. In a data based and technological society, leadership is the responsibility of all citizens, a parent, teacher, scholar, administrator, public servant, nurse and doctor, mayor and councillor, fisher, builder, business person, industrialist, MP, MLA, PM, and so on. In other words leadership is distributed and requires people power. This form of citizenship, according to Andrew Feenberg, Canada Research Chair in Philosophy of Technology, requires agency, knowledge and the capacity to act or power. In this GovMaker Keynote I will introduce the concept of technological citizenship, I will discuss what principled public interest governing might look like, and how we might go about critically applying philosophy in our daily practice. In terms of practice I will discuss innovative policy and regulation such as the right to repair movement, EU legislation such as the right to explanation, data subjects and the right to access and also data sovereignty from a globalization and an indigenous perspective.
AoIR 2017
Panel 17 Dorpat-Ewers, Tartu 9-10:30AM
Data Driven Ontology Practices
The Real world objects of Ordnance Survey Ireland
Abstract is available here: https://www.conftool.com/aoir2017/index.php?page=browseSessions&form_session=258&presentations=show
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Removing Uninteresting Bytes in Software FuzzingAftab Hussain
Imagine a world where software fuzzing, the process of mutating bytes in test seeds to uncover hidden and erroneous program behaviors, becomes faster and more effective. A lot depends on the initial seeds, which can significantly dictate the trajectory of a fuzzing campaign, particularly in terms of how long it takes to uncover interesting behaviour in your code. We introduce DIAR, a technique designed to speedup fuzzing campaigns by pinpointing and eliminating those uninteresting bytes in the seeds. Picture this: instead of wasting valuable resources on meaningless mutations in large, bloated seeds, DIAR removes the unnecessary bytes, streamlining the entire process.
In this work, we equipped AFL, a popular fuzzer, with DIAR and examined two critical Linux libraries -- Libxml's xmllint, a tool for parsing xml documents, and Binutil's readelf, an essential debugging and security analysis command-line tool used to display detailed information about ELF (Executable and Linkable Format). Our preliminary results show that AFL+DIAR does not only discover new paths more quickly but also achieves higher coverage overall. This work thus showcases how starting with lean and optimized seeds can lead to faster, more comprehensive fuzzing campaigns -- and DIAR helps you find such seeds.
- These are slides of the talk given at IEEE International Conference on Software Testing Verification and Validation Workshop, ICSTW 2022.
FIDO Alliance Osaka Seminar: The WebAuthn API and Discoverable Credentials.pdf
Census 2011: Who Are We? The Canadian Census Used to Tell Us
1. Census 2011: Who Are We? The
Canadian Census Used to Tell Us
Tracey P. Lauriault
CLA 2011 National Conference and Trade Show
Halifax, Nova Scotia
The World Trade & Convention Centre: May 25 - 28, 2011
2. Reason for a Census
“under the modern system, it is nothing less than a great periodical
stocktaking of the people and of their affairs, designed to show
from the widest possible angle the state that has been reached in
the general progress of the nation”
(Dominion Bureau of Statistics, 1924:xi).
“Fundamentally the importance of the census hinges upon its
enumeration and analysis of the human element or man – power of
the country – the people themselves – the basic asset of every
state.”
(Dominion Bureau of Statistics, 1924:xii).
4. Nation's Navigation System
Thus the Census rounds out and completed the scheme of
information by which as by a chart the government
directs the affairs of the nations. Without the census, it
would be literal truth to say that legislation and
administration would be carried on in the dark – that
there would be no means of knowing whether the country
was on the road to success or disaster, or what
constituted the norm or standard of its progress in almost
any particular.”
(Dominion Bureau of Statistics, 1924:xii).
8. Definition
A census is the procedure of systematically acquiring and
recording information about the members of a given
population. It is a regularly occurring and official count of a
particular population. The United Nations defines the
essential features of population and housing censuses as
"individual enumeration, universality within a defined
territory, simultaneity and defined periodicity".
The census can be contrasted with sampling in which
information is obtained only from a subset of a population,
sometimes as an Intercensal estimate.
9. Major Legislative requirements
Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation Act Canada Health Act
National Housing Act Food and Drug Act
Income Tax Act Canada Pension Plan Act
Canadian Multiculturalism Act Old Age Security Act
Citizenship Act Canada Student Loans Act
Youth Criminal Justice Act Canada Student Financial Assistance Act
Canadian Human Rights Act Employment Equity Act
Canada Elections Act Canada Pension Plan Investment Board Act
Electoral Boundaries Readjustment Act Employment Insurance Act
Funding for Diagnostic and Medical Equipment Act Indian Act
Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Resources Consumer Packaging and Labelling Act
Accord Implementation Act
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Act
Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador
Official Languages Act
Additional Fiscal Equalization Offset Payments Act
(2005) Canada Council for the Arts Act
Budget Implementation Act 2007 Payments in Lieu of Taxes Act
Budget Implementation Act 2009 Railway Relocation and Crossing Act
Federal-provincial Fiscal Arrangements Act Canada Transportation Act
Bank Act War Veterans Allowance Act
Canada-Newfoundland Atlantic Accord Implementation
Act
14. 1891
Steamers, pack horses, dog trains, canoes, foot, buckboards, boats
and schooners transported enumerators to conduct the census
undertaken in the winter.
Source: StatCan Library Scanned Files
17. 1911
Divorced and legally separated classes are added
Source: StatCan Library Scanned Files, Scanned Report
18. 1916
1912 Census and Statistics Office was transferred to the Ministry of
Trade and Commerce
Source: StatCan Library Scanned Files
19. 1921
1918 Statistics Act Dominion Bureau of Statistics and
Census and Statistics Office is merged into the Bureau
Canadian Jubilee
1st Census after the Great War
Peace Treaty and the League of Nations necessitated a
definition of what a Canadian National
Source: StatCan Library Scanned Files
20. 1931
The Statute of Westminster, Canada becomes a self governing member of the
Commonwealth
Location of birth is asked – borders change
Times of Boom and Bust
Questions about technology – Do you have a radio?
The Bureau builds its own census machine
Source: StatCan Library Scanned Files, Scanned Report
22. 1941
Source: Canadian Century Research Infrastructure, http://www.ccri.uottawa.ca
Source: StatCan Library
Scanned Report
23. 1951
1st post war census
Social Security, pension plans, tariffs, UI
Newfoundland joins
Adding machines are used
Source: Canadian Century Research Infrastructure, http://www.ccri.uottawa.ca
24. 1956
Unprecedented growth necessitates the taking of the Census more often
Privy Council Authorizes the taking of Quinquennial Censuses of Canada
Source: StatCan Library Scanned Files, Scanned Report
25. 1961
Census is almost completely processed by a computer
More women in the workforce necessitates a better
account of labour force Statistics
30 000 enumerators
Data are transferred to a magnetic tapes
IBM 705 Mark III w/10 tape drives is used
IBM Archives: http://www-
03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/mainframe/mainfra
me_PP705.html
Source: Photo from StatCan Library
26. 1966
Data saved on 205 reels of high quality density magnetic
tape each 2400” in length
Photo reproduction technology is used to
process questionnaires
Source: Photo taken from StatCan Library, Scanned Report
27. 1971
Source: StatCan
Library Scanned
Files, Scanned
Report
The Bureau becomes
Statistics Canada
1st self enumeration, 100 anniversary of the Census, facsimile machines are used, 30 min
movie: “on a clear day you can count for ever”
28. 1976
Source: StatCan
Library Scanned
Files, Scanned
Report
Household head could be male or female, optical processing, data are in machine
readable formats with public use sample tapes
29. 1981
Source: StatCan Library
Scanned Files, Scanned Report
Budget constraints, Census to meet legislative requirements, cost share between departments as
data are required to inform programs, ancestry can be traced through the mother, massive
consultation with users
30. 1986
Source: StatCan
Library Scanned
Files, Scanned
Report
Affirmative action necessitates better tracking of sex and income, cost recovery appears with a
vengeance, profiles are available on tape, Mulroney almost cancels the census to save money –
business outcry – legislated mandate saved it
31. 1991
Common law
marriage
appears as a
concept
Source: StatCan Library
Scanned Files, Scanned Report
32. 1996 Source: StatCan Library
Scanned Files, Scanned Report
Transportation to work appears, as do household activities like unpaid work and
activity limitations
35. 2011!!!
140 years later: The Census gets short, Harper‟s Government scraps the long-form census
and relegates it to a survey, but due to legal pressure adds 2 question on language, Canadians
experience a summer of government censuslessness and hear that “Most like it long”. There
is national and international outcry to save it.
36. National Statistics Council of
Canada
“The proposed, voluntary National Household
Survey will suffer from significant respondent
self-selection bias. Even with substantial efforts
to mitigate the inevitable decline in response
rates, this will degrade the data upon which
much of the Canadian statistical system is
based.”
37. Statistics Council cntd.
likely result in Statistics Canada‟s not being able
to publish robust, detailed information for
neighbourhoods, towns or rural areas. Much of
the analytic work done by municipalities, private
firms, health agencies, highway and
transportation planners, school boards and large
numbers of other groups that depend upon
small-area knowledge and data will no longer be
possible.
38. Statistics Council cntd.
“The potential loss of vital benchmark information.
The mandatory „long form‟ means that Statistics
Canada has an accurate benchmark for the
demographics of populations who are difficult to
reach or who are less likely to complete a voluntary
survey. This, in turn, means that sampling and
weighting strategies for subsequent, voluntary
surveys can compensate for differential response
rates and produce more reliable information.”
39. Other data options?
- no other options
- Admin. data are inadequate & not comparable
- Micro scale analysis not available – sub
municipal not possible
- SAAD – taxfiler for income but only by postal
code, unsuitable for rural areas
- Private sector will only focus on where there is a
market – think telcos & universal connectivity
43. After 92 years
2006 Long-Form Census
http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/PDF/Statute/S/S-19.pdf
44. Languages
“the language spoken by the people of a country
has a distinct bearing upon its problems of
nationality and assimilation. With the
exception of religion, no individual right or
heritage is more highly prized or more jealously
guarded” (Dominion Bureau of Statistics,
1936:46).
2011 - Fédération des communautés
francophones et acadienne du Canada asked
the Federal Court to overturn the government‟s
decision on the grounds that it violates the
rights of Francophones under the Official
Languages Act by compromising data on
minority populations that are used to guide
services for French-speaking communities.
45. Agriculture
http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/PDF/Statute/S/S-19.pdf
http://www.statcan.gc.ca/ca-ra2006/q-eng.htm
The Agriculture Census remains incredibly long and mandatory.
Some suggest we will know more about cubic meters of rural manure
than we will know about urban populations.
46. Who are the users?
http://datalibre.ca/census-watch/
Canadian Association of Retired People Canadian Marketing Association /
BC Library Association (CARP) Association canadienne de marketing
Alberta Health Services, CEO Dr. Stephen
Duckett BC Chamber of Commerce Canadian Association of Social Workers Canadian Medical Association Journal
BC Government Employee Union (BCGEU) (CASW)
Alberta Professional Planners Institute Canadian Medical Association
Black Creek Community Health Centre Canadian Association of University
Access Alliance Multicultural Health and Teachers (CAUT) / Association Canadian Mental Health Association
Community Services BC Non Profit Housing Association canadienne des professeurs Canadian Network of Metropolis Centers /
Alliance canadienne des personnes retraitées BC Government and Service Employees’ d’université Réseau canadien des centres
Ancestry.ca Union Canadian Chamber of Commerce Metropolis
Anglican Church of Canada / Église anglicane Bloc Québécois Canadian Conference of the Arts Canadian Nurses Association / Société
du Canada Burlington Chamber of Commerce des infirmières du Canada
Canadian Council on Social Development /
Anne Johnston Health Station Burnaby Family Life Conseil canadien du développement Canadian Population Society /
Association canadienne de
Association des statisticiennes et statisticiens C.D. Howe Institute social
population
du Québec Caledon Institute of Social Policy / Canadian Catholic Council of Bishops &
Canadian Public Health Association /
Association du Barreau canadien / The Bar Institut Caledon des Politiques here
Association canadienne de santé
Associate of Canada Sociales Canadian Economics Association publique
Association of Canadian Economist / Calgary Herald (Editorial) Canadian Evaluation Society / Canadian Research Data Network Centre /
Association canadienne des économistes Calgary and Red Deer City Planners Association canadienne d’évaluation Réseau des centres de données de
Association des Soeurs du Canada Canada Census Committee Canadian Federation of Demographers / recherche
Association canadienne francaise pour Canadian Association of Professional Association canadienne des Canadian School Board Association
avancement de science (ACFAS) Employees démographes
Canadian Society for Epidemiology and
Association féminine d’éducation et d’action Canadian Bar Association Canadian Federation of Humanities and Biostatistics (CSEB) / Société
sociale (AFEAS) Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
Social Sciences / Fédération canadienne d’épidémiologie et de
Association francophone pour le savoir canadienne des sciences humaines et statistiques
(CCPA) / Centre canadien pour des
(Acfas) sociales
politiques alternatives Canadian Sociology Association /
Association of Canadian Archivists (ACA) Canadian Federation of Independent Association canadienne de
Canada West Foundation
Business / Fédération canadienne Sociologie
Association of Canadian Map Libraries and Canada Without Poverty Advocacy Network des entreprises indépendante
Archives (ACMLA) / Association des Canadian Alliance of Student Canadian Union of Public Employees
cartothèques et des archives Canadian Federation of Students (CUPE) / Syndicat Canadien de
Associations (CASA) / Alliance
cartographiques du Canada canadienne des étudiants (CASA)
Canadian Restaurant and Food Services Fonction Publique (SCFP)
Association of Educational Researchers of Association Canadian Urban Institute / Association
Canadian Anthropology Society / Société
Ontario canadienne d’anthropologie (CASCA)
Elizabeth Hanson, Yukon NDP Leader canadienne de développement urbain
Association of Municipalities of Ontario / Canadian Association for Business
Canadian Historical Association / Canadian Women’s Foundation
Association des municipalités de Economics (CABE) / Association
Société historique du Canada Capital Regional District (in B.C.)
l’Ontario canadienne des économistes Canadian Housing and Renewal Association Mel Cappe, former Clerk of the Privy
Association ontarienne des chercheurs et d’affaire Canadian Institute of Actuaries / Council
chercheuses en éducation au ministre Canadian Association of Geographers / l’Association canadienne des Carleton University Graduate Student
Clement (AERO) Association canadienne des actuaires Association (GSA)
Association of Ontario Health Centres géographes Canadian Institute of Transportation Carleton University Undergraduate
Association of Public Health Epidemiologists Canadian Association of Journalists / Engineers Student Association (CUSA)
in Ontario (APHEO) / Association Association canadienne de Canadian Institute of Planners / Carleton University Academic Staff
ontarienne d’épidémiologie et desanté journalisme Fédération canadienne des Association (CUASA)
publique Canadian Association of Midwifes (CAM) urbanistes & Statement by Marni
Catholic Civil Rights League
Atlantic Provinces Economics Council / Canadian Association of Public Data
Cappe
Conseil économique de province de Canadian Index of Wellbeing Catholic Women’s League of Canada
Users (CAPDU) / Association
l’atlantique canadienne des usagers de données Canadian Islamic Congress Central Toronto Community Health Centres
Larry Bagnell, MP Yukon publiques Canadian Jewish Congress / Congrès Juif Centre francophone de Toronto
Canadian Association of Research Canadien Centre for Study of Living Standards /
Libraries (CARL) / Association Canadian Labour Congress / Congrès Centre de recherche pour niveau de
47. Users cntd.
http://datalibre.ca/census-watch/
Collectif de bibliothécaires du Québec Cornwall Agape Centre Free Education Montreal
Centre interuniversitaire québécois des
statistiques sociales / CIQSS-QICSS / (Jo-Ann Belair, Annie Bérubé, Daily Bread Food Bank (Toronto) Front d’action populaire en
Quebec Inter-University Centre for Stéfano Biondo, Joë réaménagement urbain (FRAPRU)
Davenport Perth Community Health Centre
Social Statistics Bouchard,Chantal Beauregard, Pierre Ivan Fellegi, Former Chief Statistician,
Carrier, Pierre Chicoine, Nancy Département de démographie of Université Statistics Canada
Chinese Canadian National Council de Montréal
Drolet, Alain Gendron, Catherine Tom Flanagan, University of Calgary
Children’s Aid Society of Toronto Jalbert, Guy Julien, Christian District of Nipissing Social Service
Cities Centre – University of Toronto Research Admin Board French Language Services Commissioner of
Lacroix, Dominique Lapierre, Marie-
Institute Ontario / commissaire aux services
Denise Lavoie, Louise Leblanc, District of Maple Ridge en français de l’Ontario
Cityspaces Consulting Ltd. Sonia Léger, Véronique Paré, Doctors Nova Scotia
Normand Pelletier, Marcel Plourde, Glendon School of International and
Citizens Engaging Democracy, Newmarket-
Aurora Gaston Quirion, Rose-Marie Racine- Don Drummond; former chief economist of Public Policy
April et Chantal St-Louis) TD bank, former ADM of Finance Globe and Mail Editorials
City of Burnaby Economic Development Association of
Concordia University Student’s Stephen Gordon, economist Université
City of Brampton Associations British Columbia (EDABC) Laval
City of Calgary Co-operative Housing Federation of Edmonton Journal, Editorial Government of Nunavut
City of Charlottetown Canada / Fédération Canadienne des Evangelical Fellowship of Canada / Frank Graves, EKOS Research (polling)
City of Edmonton Coopératives de Logement Alliance Évangélique du Canada
Greater Halifax Partnership
City of Fredericton Committee of Presidents of Statistical Environics Analytics Greater Victoria Community Indicators
City of Greater Sudbury Societies Fair Share Peel Network
City of Hamilton Commission des droits de la personne et Family Service Association of Toronto Green Party of Canada / Parti vert du
des droits de la jeunesse Research, Evaluation and Planning
City of Kelowna Canada
Commissariat aux langues officielles Family Service Toronto
City of Kitimat Grey County
Community Development Halton (Ontario) Federation of Post-Secondary Educators
City of Langley Halifax Chronicle-Herald, Editorial
Community Development Council Durham of BC
City of Laval Halton, Region of
Community Foundations of Canada Fédération canadienne de démographie
City of Mississauga Hamilton’s Settlement and Integration
Community Social Planning Council of Fédération des associations étudiantes Services Organization
City of Moose Jaw
Greater Victoria du Campus de l’Université de Hamilton Roundtable for Poverty
City of Montreal Montréal (FAÉCUM)
Confédération des associations Reduction
City of North Vancouver, and Minutes étudiantes de l’Université Laval Fédération des chambres de commerce du Hamilton Community Foundation
City of Merritt (CADEUL) Quebec
Headwaters Communities in Action (HCIA)
City of Montreal Conseil consultatif sur la condition de Féderation des Communautés Francophones
femme du Nouveau-Brunswick et Acadiennes du Canada (FCFA) The Hill Times editorial
City of New Westminster
Concordia Student Union Fédération des travailleurs et Alex Himelfarb, former Clerk of Privy
City of Ottawa Council
City of Penticton Conference Board of Canada travailleuses du Québec
Fédération étudiante collégiale du Imagine Canada
City of Pitt Meadows Conference des Lecteurs et Principaux
des University de Quebec / Québec (FECQ) Information and Communications
City of Prince George Technology Council
Conference of Rectors and Federation of Canadian Municipalities /
City of Red Deer Principals of Quebec Universities Fédération canadienne des Institut de statistiques Quebec /
City of Spruce Grove (Association of Universities in municipalités (Letter) Statistical Institute of Quebec
City of Surrey Quebec) Fédération étudiante universitaire du Institute for Research on Public Policy
City of Toronto, and other info. Conférence régionale des élus (CRÉ) de Québec (FEUQ) Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami / Association
City of Vancouver Laval Fédération Québécoise des Professeurs et nationale Inuit (du Canada)
City of Vernon Conseil permanent de la jeunesse (CPJ) Professeures d’Universités Liberal Party of Canada / Parti Libéral
Conseil des agences servant les Greg Finnegan, director of the Yukon du Canada
City of Victoria
immigrants Bureau of Statistics Lumina Research Valuation and Advisory
Conseil Québécois des Coopératives et Dr. Robin Fitzgerald, Research Fellow, Services
des Municipalités Key Centre for Ethics, Law, Justice Maclean’s Magazine (Articles)
Conservative MP James Rajotte and Governance, Griffith Marketing Research and Intelligence
University, Canadian Scholar Association (MRIA) / Association de
48. Users cntd.
http://datalibre.ca/census-watch/
Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) Société franco-manitobaine
Roger Martin, Rotman School of Management
Immigrants Quebec Community Groups Network Société de l’Acadie du Nouveau-Brunswick
Patricia J. Martens PhD, Director, Manitoba
Centre for Health Policy; CIHR/PHAC Ontario Council of University Libraries Quebec English School Board Association Social Development Council of Cornwall
Applied Public Health Chair; Professor, Ontario deputy finance minister Peter and Area (SDC)
Queen’s University
Department of Community Health Wallace South Riverdale Community Health Centre
Queer Ontario
Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Ontario Human Rights Commission (OHRC) John Rafferty, MP SPARC BC (Social Planning and Research
University of Manitoba Council of BC)
Ontario Non-Profit Housing Association Research Centre on Digital Inclusion /
Martin Prosperity Institute (OPNHA) StarPhoenix [Saskatoon ] Editorial
Centre de recherche et
JJ McCullough Ontario-Municipal Social Services Statistical Society of Canada
d’expérimentation sur l’inclusion
McGill’s Post-Graduate Student Society Association (OMSSA) numérique (CREIN) Statistics Canada Advisory Committee
(PGSS) Ontario Professional Planners Institute Regent Park Community Health Centre Statistics Canada Advisory Committee on
Dr. McKeown, Medical Officer of Health, City Ontario Public School Boards AssociationRegion of Durham Demographic Statistics and Studies
of Toronto / Comité consultatif sur les études
Opportunities Waterloo Region Region of Waterloo
Kelly McParland (editor of Full Comment, the et les statistiques démographiques
National Post) Orillia Packet and Times (Editorial) Region of York de Statistique Canada
Medical Health Officers Council of Dr. Sylvia Ostry, Former Chief Regional Planning Commissioners of Students’ Society of McGill University
Saskatchewan Statistician Ontario (SSMU)
Metcalf Foundation Ottawa Citizen Editorial Registered Nurses Association of Ontario Sudbury Star, Editorial
Métis National Council (MNC) PARC (Toronto) Richard Florida, University of Toronto Surrey Board of Trade (BC)
Metropolis British Columbia Peel, Regional Municipality Residential and Civil Construction Syndicat des employés internationaux
Peel Children’s Aid / Aide à l’enfance Alliance of Ontario (RCCAO) / unis (SEIU)
Metro Vancouver (AKA GVRD)
région de Peel Alliance de la construction Table régionale des organismes
Metro Vancouver Housing Committee résidentielle et civile de
Peel Poverty Action Group (PPAG) communautaires autonomes en
Kevin Milligan, economist at University of l’Ontario logement de Laval (TROCALL)
British Columbia Peterborough’s medical officer of health
Royal Society of Canada Tasha Kheirridin
Mike Moffatt Pickard &Law Firm
Rural Ontario Institute (ROI) Toronto Association for Business
David Murakami Wood, Queen’s University Pillar Nonprofit Network
St. Joseph’s Health Centre Economics
Nanos Research (polling) Planning Council of Cambridge and North
Dumfries (Cambridge,Ont.) St. Stephen’s House Toronto Board of Trade
National Council of Women of Canada
(NCWC) Planning Institute of British Columbia Saskatchewan School Board Association Toronto Board of Health
(PIBC) Saskatchewan Students’ Union (USSU) Toronto Immigrant Employment Data
National Post Editorial Initiative (TIEDI)
Blake Poland, Associate Professor, DallaSexual Assault and Violence Intervention
National Specialty Society for Community Lana School of Public Health, Services (SAVIS) Toronto Public Health / Directeur de
Medicine University of Toronto Munir A. Sheikh, Former Chief santé publique de Toronto
National Statistics Council (French Statement) John Pliniussen, Queen’s University Statistician of Canada Toronto Star Editorial
/ Association statistique du Canada Martin Simard, laboratoire LERGA,
Portage La Prairie, Municipality Toronto Social Research and Data
Nature International Editorial Département des sciences humaines Consortium (30 health, community
Poverty Free Halton
New Democratic Party of Canada / Nouveau et CRDT, Université du Québec à and multi-service social agencies)
Parti Démocratique du Canada Valerie Preston, director of CERIS Chicoutimi
research centre on immigration and Toronto Women’s Housing Co-op
New Heights Community Health Centres settlement issues York University Simcoe County Town of Caledon
North Bay Parry Sound District Health Unit Prentice Institute at University of Andrejs Skaburskis, Queen’s University Town of Halton Hills
North Western Ontario Municipal Association Lethbridge Social Planning Council of Kitchener- Town of Milton
Oak Park Neighbourhood Centre The Professional Institute of the Public Waterloo
Town of Smith Falls
Office of the Ombudsmen, City of Toronto Service of Canada Social Planning Council of Ottawa
Transportation Association of Canada /
Official Language Commissioner Province of Manitoba Social Planning Council of Sudbury Conseil du transport urbain du
Ontario Chamber of Commerce Province of New Brunswick Social Planning Network of Ontario Canada
Province of Ontario Social Planning Toronto Ukrainian Canadian Congress / Congrès
Province of Ontario – Office of Social Planning Council of Winnipeg Canadien Ukrainien
Francophone Affairs Social Policy in Ontario United Church of Canada
49. Users cntd.
http://datalibre.ca/census-watch/
United Steelworkers
United Way of Calgary
United Way of Canada
United Way of Kitchener-Waterloo and Area
United Way of Greater Simcoe County
United Way Toronto
Université de Toronto
Urban Public Health Network
Urban Futures
Vancouver Board of Trade
Volunteer Toronto
Waterloo, Region of
Waterloo Students Planning Advisory
Wellesley Institute
West Hill Community Services
West Toronto Support Services
Winnipeg Regional Health Authority
WoodGreen Community Services
Women’s Hands Community Health Centre
York Community Services
50. Actions
- Social Planning Council of Toronto: Save our Census
- New Brunswick Advisory Council on the Status of Women Take Action et En
action; A woman‟s View & Le point de vue d‟une femme
- Caledon Institute of Social Policy: Stand up for good government, MPs*
- Canadian Council on Social Development: Toolkit
- Community Dispatch: Changes To 2011 Census Threaten Community Data and
- Citizens Engaging Democracy, Newmarket-Aurora
- Vote on the Digital Strategy Submission: Reinstate the Census Long Form
- Letter Writing: Canadian Institute of Planners
- Petition: Keep the Canadian Census Long Form Petition
- Facebook Page: Keep the Canadian Census Long Form
- Opinion: Survey
- #census #statcan #cdnpoli
- datalibre.ca
51. Use example
Pilot Atlas of the Risk of Homelessness, Geomatics and
Cartographic research Centre
http://atlas.gcrc.carleton.ca/homelessness/intro/intro.xml.ht
ml
53. New Canadians
Source:
CSDS Consortium Member – Social Planning and Research Council of
Hamilton http://www.sprc.hamilton.on.ca/CommunityMappingService.php
54. Child Poverty
Report Card Partners
Halton Catholic District School Board
ROCK Reach Out Centre for Kids
Halton Children's Aid Society
Halton District School Board
Halton Region, Departments of
Health and Social &
Community Services
Halton Regional Police Services
Transitions for Youth
Source:
CSDS Consortium Members – Halton Region - Our Kids Our Community Report Card
http://www.ourkidsnetwork.ca/about/partners.shtml
57. Data are more than facts, or the
unique arrangement of facts in
databases.
Data are also culture & heritage
artifacts, they are part of are our
collective record & they fuel our
imagination.