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Did You Know?
153,306
:: Wedding ceremonies conducted
in Canada in 1997. (StatsCan)
Mixed Couples On Rise More and more Canadians have formed unions involving
partners from different ethnic origins, religions or visible
minority groups, according to a new study. These unions still represent a low proportion of the
total in Canada, but they have gained ground over the last
decade, according to the report in Statistics Canada’s
quarterly publication Canadian Social Trends. In 2001, an estimated 14.1 million people were living as
either a married couple, or as a couple in a common-law
union. Of these, some 452,000 individuals were in a couple
comprised of one visible minority and one non-visible
minority, or members of two different visible minority
groups. This was a 35% increase from 1991, more than three times
the increase of 10% for all people living in a couple. In 2001, mixed unions represented 3.2% of all people
living in couples in Canada, up from 2.6% a decade earlier. Mixed couples could be increasing for many reasons. A key
factor is Canada’s growing cultural diversity. In 2001,
there were more members of visible minority groups in Canada
than at any time in the past, creating a larger pool of
potential mates. The 4.0 million visible minorities in Canada in 2001
accounted for more than 13% of the population, more than
twice the proportion of only 5% in 1981. The most common type of mixed marriage or common-law
union occurred between a member of a visible minority and
someone who was not. There were 394,300 people in such
couples in 2001, accounting for 2.8% of all people in
couples, up from 2.4% in 1991. Of these couples, 53% consisted of a woman who was a
visible minority and a man who was not, and 47% the reverse. About 4% of all common-law unions were mixed in 2001,
compared with 2.9% of all marriages. Mixed unions accounted for 7% of all people in couples in
Vancouver, 6% in Toronto and 3% in Montreal. However, among
the age group 20 to 29, the proportions doubled to 13% in
Vancouver, 11% in Toronto and 6% in Montreal. You can read the report “Mixed unions” in the Summer 2004
edition of Canadian Social Trends. For more information, contact Anne Milan
(613-951-2756), Housing, Family and Social Statistics
Division
(StatsCan)
The views and opinions
here are not necessarily those of KCW.
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