BIBLIOGRAPHY

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Macro Research

  • Adams, Michael. Fire and Ice: The United States, Canada and the Myth of Converging Values. Penguin. 2003.
  • Anderssen, Erin, and Michael Valpy. The New Canada: A Globe and Mail Report on the Next Generation. McClelland and Stewart. 2004.
  • Assemblée communautaire fransaskoise (ACF). Portraits fransaskois. 2002.
  • Association for Canadian Studies. Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism: 40 years After. Canadian Issues. June 2003.
  • Blake, Philip. The Returns to Bilingualism Across Selected Census Metropolitan Areas in Canada. Canadian Heritage. 2001.
  • Breton, Albert (ed.). Economic Approaches to Language and Bilingualism. Canadian Heritage. 1998.
  • Breton, Albert (ed.). Exploring the Economics of Language. Canadian Heritage. 1999.
  • Canada. Canadian Heritage. The Canadian Experience in the Teaching of Official Languages. 1997.
  • Canada. Commissioner of Official Languages. Canadian Linguistic Facts and Figures: Manitoba, Saskatchewan. 2001.
  • Canada. Commissioner of Official Languages. French: A Truly Official Language. 2004.
  • Canada. Commissioner of Official Languages. Perspectives on Bilingualism: A Research Review, 1998 to 2003. 2004.
  • Canada. Office of the Commissioner of Official Languages. Vision and Challenges for the 21st Century. Report on the Symposium on Official Languages. 2004.
  • Canadian Parents for French. French Second-Language Education: A Millennium Challenge. 1999.
  • Canadian Parents for French. The State of French Second Language Education in CanadaExternal site. 2004. 
  • Centre for Research and Information on Canada. A Changing People: Being Canadian in a New Century. 2003.
  • Centre for Research and Information on Canada. Portraits of Canada 2001. 2002.
  • Centre for Research and Information on Canada. Portraits of Canada 2003. 2004.
  • Centre for Research and Information on Canada. Survey on Official Languages – Preliminary PowerPoint Presentation. 2004.
  • Churchill, Stacy. Official Languages in Canada: Changing the Language Landscape. 1998.
  • COMPAS. “Bilingualism – Chamber Weekly CEO/Business Leader Poll.” Financial Post. December 1, 2003.
  • Council of Ministers of Education in Canada. Report on French- and English-Language Education in Minority Settings and the Teaching of English and French as Second Languages. 1995.
  • Degelman, Monique M. The Study and Enrolment and Attrition in the French Immersion Program in the Saskatoon Catholic School Board. Saskatoon Catholic School Board. 1998.
  • Fédération des communautés francophones et acadienne du Canada. Francophone Community Profile in Saskatchewan. 2004.
  • GPC International. Attitudes and Perceptions Toward Canada's Official Languages. Canadian Heritage. 2003.
  • Graddol, David. The Future of English? A Guide to Forecasting the Popularity of English in the 21st Century. British Council. 2000.
  • Green, Alan G., Mary Mackinnon and Chris Minns. "Conspicuous by Their Absence: French Canadians and the Settlement of the Canadian West." Journal of Economic History. 65:3, September 2005.
  • Hamers, Josiane F., and Michel H. A. Blanc. Bilinguality and Bilingualism. Cambridge University Press. 2000.
  • Hufeisen, Britta. "Multilingual Language Acquisition in Canada and Germany: 1960–1995." Culture and Curriculum. 8.2 (1995): 177-181.
  • Jedwab, Jack. Canadian Identity: Bilingualism, Multiculturalism and the Charter of Rights. Association for Canadian Studies. 2003.
  • Jedwab, Jack. Canadian Opinion Toward Second-Language Knowledge and Education. Association for Canadian Studies. 2003.
  • Jedwab, Jack. It Pays to Be Bilingual in Canada: Though Not Everywhere. Association for Canadian Studies. 2003.
  • Korn/Ferry International. Global Survey of Recruiters Reveals Demand for Multi-Language Capabilities Among Senior Executives. 2005.
  • Lapierre, André, Patricia Smart and Pierre Savard (eds.). Language, Culture and Values in Canada at the Dawn of the 21st Century. International Council for Canadian Studies/Carleton University Press. 1996.
  • Léger Marketing. Canadians and Bilingualism in Canada. 2003.
  • Marmen, Louise. Languages in Canada: 2001 CensusGovernment site. Canadian Heritage/Statistics Canada. 2004.
  • Mendelsohn, Matthew. Canada's Social Contract: Evidence from Public Opinion. Canadian Policy Research Networks 2002.
  • Nevitte, Neil (ed.). Value Change and Governance in Canada. Canadian Heritage. 2002.
  • O'Keefe, Michael. Francophone Minorities: Assimilation and Community Vitality. Canadian Heritage. 2001.
  • O'Keefe, Michael. Language Duality—Presentation to the Meeting of the National Coordinators. Canadian Heritage. 2001.
  • Parkin, Andrew, and Matthew Mendelsohn. A New Canada: An Identity Shaped by Diversity. Centre for Research and Information on Canada. 2003.
  • Parkin, Andrew, and André Turcotte. Bilingualism: Part of our Past or Part of our Future? Centre for Research and Information on Canada. 2004.
  • Réseau Circum. Motivations for School Choices by Eligible Parents Outside Quebec. 1999.
  • Saul, John Ralston. Reflections of a Siamese Twin: Canada at the End of the Twentieth Century. Viking. 1997.

Saskatchewan-Specific Research

  • Canada. Commissioner of Official Languages. Canadian Linguistic Facts and Figures: Manitoba, Saskatchewan. 2001.
  • Canadian Parents for French. French Second Language Education: A Millennium Challenge. 1999.
  • Canadian Parents for French. State of French Second Language Education in CanadaExternal site. 2004.
  • Churchill, Stacy. Official Languages in Canada: Changing the Language Landscape. Canadian Heritage. 1998.
  • Degelman, Monique M. The Study and Enrolment and Attrition in the French Immersion Program in the Saskatoon Catholic School Board. Saskatoon Catholic School Board. 1998.
  • Fédération des communautés francophones et acadienne du Canada. Francophone Community Profile in Saskatchewan. 2004.

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