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022_000101/0000

Minorities in Canada. Intercultural investigations

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Field of science
Kultúrakutatás, kulturális sokféleség / Cultural studies, cultural diversity (12950)
Series
Károli könyvek. Tanulmánykötet
Type of publication
tanulmánykötet
022_000101/0053
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Page 54 [54]
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022_000101/0053

OCR

VICTORIA MCGOWAN Compensation Board insurance, and allow OHS investigation in the event of serious injury or fatality." A year after Bill 6’s passing and implementation, the Calgary Herald reported that “many producers... remain unhappy about being forced" to follow such rules, as a farm was a family business, and therefore should not involve the government.? This focus on rural farming as the business of families independent of government influence extends back to the first influx of Eastern European immigrants. During this time, many of these immigrants were promised farming land, free of any such intrusions they may have experienced in the pre- and post-revolutionary Russian state. In the hundred years since that first wave of refugees, rural Albertan farmers have frequently resisted what they see as the imposition of unnecessary regulations; many of the initial Eastern European refugees could clearly recall government grain seizures and the resulting famines, and therefore remained wary of any interference. Such understandings about the role of farmers in relation to the government has clearly continued to the present day. The Russian Revolution and the ensuing Russian Civil War were times of mass upheaval for peasants in the former Russian Empire. While hundreds of scholarly works have been written on the Revolution and its aftermath within the confines of Russian territory, far fewer have been written on its impact outside of Eastern Europe. Of these, all but a handful discuss the foreign ramifications of the Revolution in terms of the impact on Western politics as a result of the rise of a nominally successful communist state. The subtler global implications of the Revolution — and indeed, of revolutions generally — has not been examined in any kind of meaningful way. However, by examining the twentieth century history of Alberta, we can see that such inattention by historians is an oversight, as the Revolution subtly but profoundly affected the cultural and political direction of that province. Refugees fleeing the Russian Revolution settled in large numbers in rural Alberta, creating groups around shared languages and shared cultural values and practices. These cultural values and practices often marked them as “others” in the Anglo-Canadian community, and they largely remained in homogenous language and culture groups for some time. There were very real differences in behaviour between Eastern European and Western European/American immigrants, but in many cases, these differences were over-exaggerated in support of racist perspectives, further contributing to isolation of these groups. However, despite this initial isolation, refugees from the former Russian Empire were able to succeed in 61 Government of Alberta, Farm and Ranch Workplace Legislation, Government of Alberta, Last Modified 12 May 2017, https://www.alberta.ca/farm-and-ranch.aspx (accessed 16 August 2020). James Wood, “A year after Bill 6, farm workers WCB claims more than double,” 5 January 2017, Calgary Herald. Last Modified 5 January 2017, http://calgaryherald.com/news/politics/ a-year-after-bill-6-farmworkers-wcb-claims-more-than-double (accessed 16 August 2020). 62 s 52 e

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1830 px
Hauteur de l'image
2834 px
Résolution de l'image
300 px/inch
Taille du fichier d'origine
1.28 MB
Lien permanent vers jpg
022_000101/0053.jpg
Lien permanent vers OCR
022_000101/0053.ocr

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