Speaker rejects NDP bid for emergency census debate as court challenge hearings begin next week http://ow.ly/2Ha4s
Commercial corporations attempt to take the market $$$ left by censushttp://ow.ly/2H2Hy
Entreprises commerciales tentent de prendre marché $$$ laissé par recensement http://ow.ly/2H2CG
Saturday, I cleaned the house while listening to a lecture by sociologist Saskia Sassen on the evolving concept of citizenship in a globalizing world recorded for the Big Ideas show (mp3, video). The conference focused on the multiple micro changes that globalization causes in the definition and experience of citizenship (or of the political subjectivity, in other words).
Sassen reminds us that while we tend to experience citizenship as an unitary condition, in fact citizenship is made of a whole bundle of components. At the heart of citizenship, there is a bundle of formal rights that are recognized by State. But there are as well around many other social elements that might not derive from our connection to the State (such as the physical environment of the city vs. the countryside). So one can unbundle citizenship to look as how each of these elements emerges, changes and disappears; thus how the whole idea of citizenship is evolving as a result.
This idea brought me back to that of a citizen awakening as data subject. A theme that corresponds to a wish I expressed as early as in 1988 in my contribution to the book Human Rights in Canada: Into the 1990s and Beyond.[1] Sassen’s lecture called this question to me: are we now also witnessing this historic micro change of the addition of the status of data subject into the consciousness of contemporary citizen? (more…)
Census: Canada to be excluded of key international comparative databases: GTranslate http://ow.ly/2FRAk
Recensement volontaire: Le Canada serait exclu des bases de données internationales http://ow.ly/2FQVp
Real issue: RT @Cyclophile: “I would not trust the census.. many of us lied on it (well, I lied on Race, none of their biz)”
catroy: @PierrotPeladeau Ne comprends pas cette phobie de fournir une info utile et plutôt évidente tout en pitchant les détails de sa vie en ligne
PierrotPeladeau: @catroy La contradiction n’est qu’apparente: Mot clé n’est pas “privé”, mais “JE”. Comme dans “seul moi décide”. Alors le contrat social…
PierrotPeladeau: @catroy En fait ce n’est pas phobie, mais geste d’affirmation politique, identitaire ou ludique: comme ceux qui ont donné “Jedi” à religion
catroy: @PierrotPeladeau Peut-être. Moi, j’ai plutôt tendance à dire que c’est de l’entêtement irrationnel et plutôt égoïste.
PierrotPeladeau: @catroy D’accord. Sauf que cette tendance sera de plus en plus lourde. Solution: éducation + approche open data conviviale pour tous
PierrotPeladeau: @catroy Le jour où données démographiques seront aussi accessibles et appropriables que celles via GoogleMaps et Environ. Can./MétéoMédia…
PierrotPeladeau: @catroy Aussi démocratiser confection du recensement: plusieurs, dont moi pour “origine ethnique”, voyons problème avec certaines questions
Census changes to complicate Bank of Canada’s analyses to set country’s monetary policy http://ow.ly/2FyDf
Inst. Statistiques du Québec calls for a public consultation on 2016 Canadian census: GTranslate http://ow.ly/2Fr7s
Inst. Statistiques du Québec (ISQ) demande une consultation publique pour le recensement 2016 http://ow.ly/2FpZd
MT @TraceyLauriault: Big #census Media Round-up http://datalibre.ca/2010/09/11/big-census-media-round-up/
Canadian government study reveals significant errors significant errors can creep into voluntary census http://ow.ly/2BGOq
MT @TraceyLauriault: Canadian #census Media Roundup http://datalibre.ca/2010/09/03/census-media-roundup-2/
Does it apply to Harper & Census?: Study: Genetics affect whether we’re willing to take surveys http://ow.ly/2xWdx
Do you know someone who completed the census out of fear of fine or imprisonment? Or someone having not completed it who feared it? No? Then ask: What does Harper government fear?
Decision to transform the mandatory census’ long-form into a voluntary survey has led to genuine alarms. Scientists, business communities and local administrations dread deterioration of the data necessary to their work and decisions. Organizations acting for linguistics minorities, women and other communities worry about losing sound figures on which they base their advocacy.
However, accusations that Conservatives try to undermine the gathering of information that might contradict their policies are not plausible. It would be a dangerous game: skewed results from botched census could as much disserve them. It does not fit with a 50% multiplication of long questionnaires (from 3 to 4.5 million at additional cost of $30 million) plus a participation promotion campaign. Moreover, this government’s punctilious programs’ reviews and, especially, this Conservative Party’s wedge politics strategies require very reliable statistical benchmarks. (more…)