Gs. Basran, INDO-CANADIAN FAMILIES HISTORICAL CONSTRAINTS AND CONTEMPORARY CONTRADICTIONS, Journal of comparative family studies, 24(3), 1993, pp. 339-352
Immigrants from India arrived in Canada circa 1900. About 95 percent o
f early immigrants came from the Punjab State of India and were of the
Sikh religion. Their entry into Canada, as well as their stay in Cana
da, were controlled by various immigration policies and social, econom
ic, and political constraints.This paper examines historical condition
s, structural contraints, and the Canadian immigration policies which
shaped the Indo-Canadian families in Canada. The main role of the fami
ly is to produce and reproduce labour for the capitalist system. The f
amily is also the place where individuals are socialized, protected, a
nd supported as they adapt to external constraints. The main focus of
the paper is to understand the structure, function, and contradictions
in the institution of the family in regard to historical conditions a
nd contemporary social, political, and economic forces.