In Quebec, and Newfoundland and Labrador, as well as in each of the three territories, residents are more likely to feel very attached to their province or territory than to feel very attached to Canada. [...] How attached do you feel to each of the following: to [name of province / territory]? In two provinces, residents are more likely to feel very attached to their province than to Canada: Quebec, and Newfoundland and Labrador. [...] This compares to only eight percent feel attached to Canada and not to their province or territory, and a similar proportion that feel attached to their province or territory but not to Canada. [...] One in five Quebecers (including 23 percent of francophones in the province) feel attached to their province but not to Canada (compared to only 4% in the rest of the country). [...] Seven in ten (69%) are attached to both Canada and to their Indigenous nation or community, compared to 15 percent who are attached to Canada but not to their Indigenous nation or community, and nine percent who are attached to their Indigenous nation or community but not to Canada.
Authors
- Pages
- 31
- Published in
- Canada
Table of Contents
- _Hlk167692405 11
- Introduction 5
- Attachment to political communities 8
- Attachment to Canada 9
- Attachment to province or territory 10
- Attachment to Indigenous nation or community 13
- Attachment to city or town 15
- Overlapping attachments 15
- Canadian and provincial identities 19
- Indigenous and Canadian identities 24
- The expression of identity 27