*In April 2022, the university announced our new name of Toronto Metropolitan University, which will be implemented in a phased approach. Learn more about our next chapter.*
The Toronto Metropolitan Centre for Immigration and Settlement (TMCIS) aims to be a leader in the transdisciplinary exploration of international migration, integration, and diaspora and refugee studies. In addition to supporting research in these areas, the Centre’s mission includes mentoring students and consolidating Toronto Metropolitan University’s reputation as the pre‐eminent site of knowledge development and exchange with governments, community organizations, and other academics.
Featured
Latest Publications
Working paper no. 2024/04
Ethnic Diversity, Immigrant Settlement and Integration, and Municipal Planning in a Small Canadian City: The Case of Brooks, Alberta
Ryan Lok (University of Waterloo), Dr. Zhixi Zhuang (Toronto Metropolitan University)
Working paper no. 2024/03
Enhancing Workplace Integration of Canadian Newcomers through Social Media.
Masoud Kianpour (Toronto Metropolitan University)
Working paper no. 2024/02
Urban sanctuary in Canadian mid-sized cities.
Jessica D. Jung, Graham Hudson & Harald Bauder (Toronto Metropolitan University)
Working paper no. 2024/01
Exploring AI-Powered Migration Management in Canada through the Prisms of Algorithmic Governmentality, Technosolutionism, and Critical Data Studies.
Hassibullah Roshan (Toronto Metropolitan University)
Working paper no. 2023/07
Embodying the deported spectacle in Tijuana. The lived experiences of Mexican deported men who stay in temporary male-exclusive shelters in Tijuana.
Renato de Almeida Arão Galhardi (Universidad Iberoamericana)
Working paper no. 2023/06
The role of images in migration governance. A proposed new theoretical framework and methodological approach
Alice Massari (Toronto Metropolitan University and University of Copenhagen)
Spotlight on migration no. 2020/4
'Safe' countries and 'fraudulent' refugees: Tools for narrowing access to Canada’s refugee system
Chantel Spade & Tearney McDermott, Ryerson University
Research brief no. 2020/1
Private sponsorship in refugee admission: Standard in Canada, trend in Germany?
Vanessa Pohlmann & Helge Schwiertz, University of Osnabrück
TMCIS occupies space in the traditional and unceded territory of nations including the Anishnaabeg, the Mississaugas of the Credit, the Chippewa, the Haudenosaunee, and the Wendat peoples, and territory which is also now home to many diverse First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples. This territory is covered by Treaty 13 signed with the Mississaugas of the Credit, as well as the Williams Treaties signed with multiple Mississaugas.