“So many things were new to us”: identifying the settlement information practices of newcomers to Canada across the settlement process

Author:

Allard DanielleORCID

Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to identify and map the shifting relationship between the settlement process and the information practices of newcomers from the Philippines as they migrate and settle in Canada.Design/methodology/approachThis research employs two semi-structured in-depth interviews, each with 14 newcomers from the Philippines to Canada. Participants were selected because they had migrated to Winnipeg through the Manitoba Provincial Nominee Program within 1–4 years of the date of interview.FindingsEight settlement information tables are identified that demonstrate participants' migration experiences, including participants' thoughts and feelings related to migration and settlement, their information questions and needs, the information resources they consult and the activities in which they engage.Originality/valueThis paper argues that this phased model approach documents the shifting relationship between settlement processes and migrants' information needs, activities, resources and practices. Articulating study findings using this phased model approach can support information institutions, such as the settlement sector and libraries, to provide support to newcomer groups in a timely and targeted manner.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,Information Systems

Reference46 articles.

1. Skilled immigrants: a resettlement information literacy framework;Journal of Documentation,2019

2. Imagining Winnipeg: the translocal meaning making of Filipino migrants to Canada;Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology,2018

3. Beyond information access: assessing the migration information practices of diverse newcomers to Canada,2017

4. Living here and there: exploring the transnational information practices of newcomers from the Philippines to Winnipeg,2015

5. The role of information in the migration experience of young Polish women in the UK;Journal of Documentation,2020

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