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1 Etymology
2 History
2.1 European colonization
2.2 Canadian Confederation
3 Government and politics
4 Law
5 Foreign relations and military
6 Provinces and territories
7 Geography and climate
8 Economy
9 Demographics
10 Culture
11 Language
Since 2001, Canada has had
troops deployed in Afghanistan as part of the U.S. stabilization force
and the UN-authorized, NATO-commanded International Security Assistance
Force. Canada has committed to withdraw from Kandahar Province by 2011,[112]
by which time it will have spent an estimated total of $11.3 billion
on the mission.[113]
Canada and the U.S. continue
to integrate state and provincial agencies to strengthen security along
the Canada-United States border through the Western Hemisphere Travel
Initiative.[114] Canada's Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) has
participated in three major relief efforts in recent years; the two-hundred-member
team has been deployed in relief operations after the 2004 Indian Ocean
earthquake in South Asia, Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and the Kashmir
earthquake in October 2005.
In February 2007, Canada, Italy,
Britain, Norway, and Russia announced their funding commitments to launch
a $1.5 billion project to help develop vaccines they said could save
millions of lives in poor nations, and called on others to join them.[115]
In August 2007, Canadian sovereignty in Arctic waters was challenged
following a Russian expedition that planted a Russian flag at the seabed
at the North Pole. Canada has considered that area to be sovereign territory
since 1925.[116]
There have historically been
and remain multiple border disputes with the USA. There are individual
disputes with Denmark over Hans Island and with France over the maritime
boundaries of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon.
Provinces and territories
Canada is a federation composed
of ten provinces and three territories; in turn, these may be grouped
into regions. Western Canada consists of British Columbia and the three
Prairie provinces (Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba).[117] Central
Canada consists of Quebec and Ontario. Atlantic Canada consists of the
three Maritime provinces (New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Nova
Scotia), along with Newfoundland and Labrador. Eastern Canada refers
to Central Canada and Atlantic Canada together. Three territories (Yukon,
Northwest Territories, and Nunavut) make up Northern Canada. Provinces
have more autonomy than territories. Each has its own provincial or
territorial symbols.[118]
The provinces are responsible
for most of Canada's social programs (such as health care, education,
and welfare) and together collect more revenue than the federal government,
an almost unique structure among federations in the world. Using its
spending powers, the federal government can initiate national policies
in provincial areas, such as the Canada Health Act; the provinces can
opt out of these, but rarely do so in practice. Equalization payments
are made by the federal government to ensure that reasonably uniform
standards of services and taxation are kept between the richer and poorer
provinces.
Geography
and climate
A satellite composite image
of Canada. Boreal forests prevail on the rocky Canadian Shield. Ice
and tundra are prominent in the Arctic. Glaciers are visible in the
Canadian Rockies and Coast Mountains. Flat and fertile prairies facilitate
agriculture. The Great Lakes feed the Saint Lawrence River (in the southeast),
where lowlands host much of Canada's population.
Canada occupies a major northern
portion of North America, sharing land borders with the contiguous United
States to the south and the U.S. state of Alaska to the northwest, stretching
from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west;
to the north lies the Arctic Ocean. By total area (including its waters),
Canada is the second largest country in the world—after Russia—and
largest on the continent. By land area, it ranks second.[119]
Since 1925, Canada has claimed the portion of the Arctic between 60°W and 141°W longitude,[120] but this claim is not universally recognized. The northernmost settlement in Canada (and the world) is Canadian Forces Station (CFS) Alert on the northern tip of Ellesmere Island—latitude 82.5°N—just 817 kilometres (450 nautical miles, 508 miles) from the North Pole.[121] Canada has the longest coastline in the world: 243,000 kilometres (151,000 miles).[122]
A geopolitical map of Canada
including its provinces and territories, international boundary, prominent
cities, and the surrounding region.
The population density, 3.5
inhabitants per square kilometre (9.1/sq mi), is among the lowest in
the world.[123] The most densely populated part of the country is the
Quebec City-Windsor Corridor, (Southern Quebec – Southern Ontario)
along the Great Lakes and Saint Lawrence River in the southeast.[124]
To the north of this region
is the broad Canadian Shield, an area of rock scoured clean by the last
ice age—thinly soiled, rich in minerals, and dotted with lakes and
rivers. Canada by far has more lakes than any other country and has
much of the world's fresh water.[125][126]
In eastern Canada, most people live in large urban centres on the flat Saint Lawrence Lowlands. The Saint Lawrence River widens into the world's largest estuary before flowing into the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. The gulf is bounded by Newfoundland to the north and the Maritimes to the south. The Maritimes protrude eastward along the Appalachian Mountain range, from northern New England and the Gaspé Peninsula of Quebec. New Brunswick and Nova Scotia are divided by the Bay of Fundy, which experiences the world's largest tidal variations. Ontario and Hudson Bay dominate central Canada. West of Ontario, the broad, flat Canadian Prairies spread toward the Rocky Mountains, which separate them from British Columbia.
Moraine Lake in Banff National
Park, Alberta.
In northwestern Canada, the Mackenzie River flows from the Great Slave Lake to the Arctic Ocean. A tributary of a tributary of the Mackenzie is the South Nahanni River, which is home to Virginia Falls, a waterfall about twice as high as Niagara Falls.
A Maritime scene at Peggys
Cove, Nova Scotia, which has long been sustained by the Atlantic fishery.
Northern Canadian vegetation
tapers from coniferous forests to tundra to the Arctic barrens in the
far north. The northern Canadian mainland is ringed with a vast archipelago
containing some of the world's largest islands.
Average winter and summer high
temperatures across Canada vary depending on the location. Winters can
be harsh in many regions of the country, particularly in the interior
and Prairie provinces, which experience a continental climate, where
daily average temperatures are near −15 °C (5 °F) but can drop below
−40 °C (−40 °F) with severe wind chills.[127] In noncoastal regions,
snow can cover the ground almost six months of the year (more in the
north). Coastal British Columbia is an exception; it enjoys a temperate
climate, with a mild and rainy winter.
On the east and west coast,
average high temperatures are generally in the low 20s °C (70s °F),
while between the coasts, the average summer high temperature ranges
from 25 to 30 °C (75 to 85 °F), with occasional extreme heat in some
interior locations exceeding 40 °C (104 °F).[128][129] For a more
complete description of climate across Canada, see Environment Canada's
Website.[130]
Canada is also geologically
active, having many earthquakes and potentially active volcanoes, notably
Mount Meager, Mount Garibaldi, Mount Cayley, and the Mount Edziza volcanic
complex.[131] The volcanic eruption of Tseax Cone in 1775 caused a catastrophic
disaster, killing 2,000 Nisga'a people and the destruction of their
village in the Nass River valley of northern British Columbia; the eruption
produced a 22.5-kilometre (14.0 mi) lava flow, and according to legend
of the Nisga'a people, it blocked the flow of the Nass River.[132]
Economy
Canada is one of the world's
wealthiest nations, with a high per capita income, and is a member of
the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and
the G8. It is one of the world's top ten trading nations.[133] Canada
is a mixed market,[134] ranking lower than the U.S. but higher than
most western European nations on the Heritage Foundation's index of
economic freedom.[135][136]
As of February 2009, Canada's
national unemployment rate was 7.77%. Provincial unemployment rates
vary from a low of 3.6% in Alberta to a high of 14.6% in Newfoundland
and Labrador.[137] According to the Forbes Global 2000 list of the world's
largest companies in 2008, Canada had 69 companies in the list, ranking
5th next to France.[138]
As of 2008, Canada’s total
government debt burden is the lowest in the G8. The OECD projects that
Canada's net debt-to-GDP ratio will decline to 19.5% in 2009, less than
half of the projected average of 51.9% for all G8 countries. According
to these projections, Canada's debt burden will have fallen over 50
percentage points from the peak in 1995, when it was the second highest
in the G8.[139]
In the past century, the growth
of the manufacturing, mining, and service sectors has transformed the
nation from a largely rural economy into one primarily industrial and
urban. As with other first world nations, the Canadian economy is dominated
by the service industry, which employs about three quarters of Canadians.[140]
Canada is unusual among developed countries in the importance of the
primary sector, with the logging and oil industries being two of Canada's
most important.
Canada is one of the few developed
nations that are net exporters of energy.[7] Atlantic Canada has vast
offshore deposits of natural gas and large oil and gas resources are
centred in Alberta. The immense Athabasca Oil Sands give Canada the
world's second-largest oil reserves, behind Saudi Arabia.[141] In Quebec,
British Columbia, Newfoundland & Labrador, New Brunswick, Ontario,
Manitoba, and Yukon, hydroelectricity is a cheap and clean source of
renewable energy.
Canada is one of the world's most important suppliers of agricultural products, with the Canadian Prairies one of the most important suppliers of wheat, canola, and other grains.[142] Canada is internationally the largest producer of zinc and uranium and a world leader in many other natural resources such as gold, nickel, aluminium, and lead;[143] many towns in the northern part of the country, where agriculture is difficult, exist because of a nearby mine or source of timber. Canada also has a sizable manufacturing sector centred in southern Ontario and Quebec, with automobiles and aeronautics representing particularly important industries.
Representatives of the Canadian,
Mexican, and United States governments sign NAFTA in 1992.
Economic integration with the
United States has increased significantly since World War II. This has
prompted Canadian nationalists to worry about cultural and economic
autonomy in an age of globalization as American television shows, movies,
and corporations have become ubiquitous.[144] The Automotive Products
Trade Agreement in 1965 opened the borders to trade in the auto manufacturing
industry. In the 1970s, concerns over energy self-sufficiency and foreign
ownership in the manufacturing sectors prompted Pierre Trudeau's Liberal
government to set up the National Energy Program (NEP) and Foreign Investment
Review Agency (FIRA).[145]
In the 1980s, Brian Mulroney's
Progressive Conservatives abolished the NEP and changed the name of
FIRA to Investment Canada in order to encourage foreign investment.
The Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement (FTA) of 1988 eliminated
tariffs between the two countries, while North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA) expanded the free trade zone to include Mexico in the 1990s.
In the mid-1990s, the Liberal
government under Jean Chrétien began posting annual budgetary surpluses
and began steadily paying down the national debt.[146] Since 2001, Canada
has maintained the best overall economic performance in the G8.[147]
The global financial crisis hit Canada with a recession and could boost
the country's unemployment rate to 10%.[148] Despite the global recession,
Canada’s labour market is in need of hundreds of thousands of foreign
workers, according to the Canadian Minister of Citizenship, Immigration
and Multiculturalism.[149]
Demographics
Canada's 2006 census counted
a total population of 31,612,897, an increase of 5.4% since 2001.[150]
Population growth is from immigration and, to a lesser extent, natural
growth. About three-quarters of Canada's population live within 150
kilometres (90 mi) of the United States border.[151] A similar proportion
live in urban areas concentrated in the Quebec City-Windsor Corridor
(notably the Greater Golden Horseshoe, including Toronto and area, Montreal,
and Ottawa), the BC Lower Mainland (consisting of the region surrounding
Vancouver), and the Calgary-Edmonton Corridor in Alberta.[152]
According to the 2006 census,
there are 43 ethnic origins that at least 100,000 people in Canada claim
in their background.[153]
The largest ethnic group is
English (21%), followed by French (15.8%), Scottish (15.2%), Irish (13.9%),
German (10.2%), Italian (5%), Chinese (3.9%), Ukrainian (3.6%), and
First Nations (3.5%). Approximately one third of respondents identified
their ethnicity as "Canadian."[154] Canada's aboriginal population
is growing almost twice as fast as the Canadian average, and 3.8% of
Canada's population claimed aboriginal identity in 2006. Also, 16.2%
of the population belonged to non-aboriginal visible minorities.[155]
The largest visible minority groups in Canada are South Asian (4%),
Chinese (3.9%) and Black (2.5%).[156]
In 2006, 51.0% of Vancouver's
population and 46.9% of Toronto's population were visible minorities.[157][158]
In March 2005, Statistics Canada projected that people of non-European
origins will constitute a majority in both Toronto and Vancouver by
2012.[159] According to Statistics Canada's forecasts, the number of
visible minorities in Canada is expected to double by 2017. A survey
released in 2007 reveals that virtually 1 in 5 Canadians (19.8%) are
foreign born.[160] Nearly 60% of new immigrants hail from Asia (including
the Middle East).[160]Religion in Canada (2001 Census)[161]
Religion Percent
Christianity 77.0%
No Religion 16.2%
Islam 2.0%
Judaism 1.1%
Buddhism 1.0%
Hinduism 1.0%
Sikhism 0.9%
Canada has the highest
per capita immigration rate in the world, driven by economic policy
and family reunification; Canada also accepts large numbers of refugees.
In 2009, approximately 265,000 new migrants are expected to arrive in
Canada.[162] Newcomers settle mostly in the major urban areas of Montreal,
Toronto, and Vancouver. In the 2006 census, there were 5,068,100 people
considered to belong to a visible minority, making up 16.2% of the population.
Between 2001 and 2006, the visible minority population rose by 27.2%.[163][164]
In common with many other developed
countries, Canada is experiencing a demographic shift towards an older
population, with more retirees and fewer people of working age. In 2006,
the average age of the civilian population was 39.5 years.[165] The
census results also indicate that despite an increase in immigration
since 2001 (which gave Canada a higher rate of population growth than
in the previous intercensal period), the aging of Canada's population
did not slow in the period.
Support for religious pluralism
is an important part of Canada's political culture. According to the
2001 census,[166] 77.1% of Canadians identify as being Christians; of
this, Catholics make up the largest group (43.6% of Canadians). The
largest Protestant denomination is the United Church of Canada (9.5%
of Canadians), followed by the Anglicans (6.8% of Canadians), Baptists
(2.4% of Canadians), Lutherans (2% of Canadians), other Christians,
4.4%.[167] About 16.5% of Canadians declare no religious affiliation,
and the remaining 6.3% are affiliated with religions other than Christianity,
of which the largest is Islam, numbering 1.9%, followed by Judaism at
1.1%.
Canadian provinces and territories
are responsible for education. Each system is similar, while reflecting
regional history, culture and geography.[168] The mandatory school age
ranges between 5–7 to 16–18 years,[168] contributing to an adult
literacy rate of 99%.[7] Postsecondary education is also administered
by provincial and territorial governments, who provide most of the funding;
the federal government administers additional research grants, student
loans, and scholarships. In 2002, 43% of Canadians aged between 25 and
64 had postsecondary education; for those aged 25 to 34, the postsecondary
education rate reaches 51%.[169]
Culture
Canadian culture has historically
been influenced by British, French, and Aboriginal cultures and traditions.
It has also been heavily influenced by American culture due to its proximity
and the high rate of migration between the two countries. The great
majority of English speaking immigrants to Canada between 1755–1815
were Americans from the Thirteen Colonies. During the War of Independence,
46,000 Americans were exiled because of their loyalty to Britain and
came to Canada. Between 1785 and 1812, 30,000 moved to Canada—the
so-called Late Loyalists—in response to promises of land, provided
that they agreed to swear allegiance to the Crown.
American media and entertainment
are popular, if not dominant, in English Canada; conversely, many Canadian
cultural products and entertainers are successful in the U.S. and worldwide.[170]
Many cultural products are marketed toward a unified "North American"
or global market.
The creation and preservation
of distinctly Canadian culture are supported by federal government programs,
laws, and institutions such as the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
(CBC), the National Film Board of Canada (NFB), and the Canadian Radio-television
and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC).[171]
Canada is a geographically vast and ethnically diverse country. Canadian culture has also been greatly influenced by immigration from all over the world. Many Canadians value multiculturalism and see Canadian culture as being inherently multicultural.[58] Multicultural heritage is the basis of Section 27 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Hockey game, McGill University,
Montreal, Quebec (1901).
National symbols are influenced
by natural, historical, and First Nations sources. Particularly, the
use of the maple leaf as a Canadian symbol dates back to the early 18th
century and is depicted on its current and previous flags, the penny,
and on the coat of arms.[172] Other prominent symbols include the beaver,
Canada Goose, Common Loon, the Crown, the RCMP,[172] and more recently,
the totem pole and Inukshuk.
Canada's official national
sports are hockey in the winter and lacrosse in the summer.[173] Hockey
is a national pastime and the most popular spectator sport in the country.
It is also the most popular sport Canadians play, with 1.65 million
active participants in 2004.[174] Canada's six largest metropolitan
areas—Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Ottawa, Calgary, and Edmonton—have
franchises in the National Hockey League (NHL), and there are more Canadian
players in the league than from all other countries combined. After
hockey, other popular spectator sports include curling and football;
the latter is played professionally in the Canadian Football League
(CFL). Golf, baseball, skiing, soccer, volleyball, and basketball are
widely played at youth and amateur levels,[174] but professional leagues
and franchises are not as widespread.
Canada hosted several high-profile
international sporting events, including the 1976 Summer Olympics, the
1988 Winter Olympics, and the 2007 FIFA U-20 World Cup. Canada will
be the host country for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver and Whistler,
British Columbia.[175]
Language
Main articles: Spoken languages of Canada, Official bilingualism in Canada, Canadian English, and Canadian French
The population of Quebec City,
Quebec is mainly French-speaking, with a small English-speaking population.
Canada's two official languages
are English and French. Official bilingualism is defined in the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the Official Languages Act, and Official
Language Regulations; it is applied by the Commissioner of Official
Languages. English and French have equal status in federal courts, Parliament,
and in all federal institutions. Citizens have the right, where there
is sufficient demand, to receive federal government services in either
English or French, and official-language minorities are guaranteed their
own schools in all provinces and territories.[176]