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Naturalization Ceremonies

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Project Lead

Antje Ellermann

Team Members

Vince HopkinsPhil TriadafilopoulosIrene BloemraadMireille Paquet, , Lisa Ruth Brunner, Taylor Jackson, , , , Nadezhda Zezyulina

Sub-Theme: Content of Citizenship

The sub-theme 'Content of Citizenship' explores through different projects the meaning of citizenship beyond a legal status, as the expression of a collective identity grounded in a shared sense of belonging to a particular national community.

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Objective

This project examines how naturalization ceremonies, including those incorporating Advanced Digital Technologies (ADTs), influence new citizens鈥 perceptions of national identity. The study involves:

  • Analyzing discourse surrounding virtual ceremonies in Canadian news media and policy documents;
  • Administering a survey to naturalizing individuals, differentiating between ceremony types (in-person, remote, enhanced ceremonies, and those involving Indigenous elders);
  • Conducting elite interviews with citizenship judges and key actors responsible for ceremony development;
  • Exploring potential collaborations with organizations involved in naturalization ceremonies in Canada and comparator countries.
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Research Questions

  1. What is the impact of Canadian naturalization ceremonies on new citizens鈥 understanding of citizenship and national identity?
  2. What is the affective impact of Canadian naturalization ceremonies? Do they enhance new citizens鈥 feelings of belonging?
  3. Is there a differential impact depending on whether ceremonies are in person or virtual, if oaths are self-administered or not? If ceremonies include Indigenous elders?
  4. How does this compare with other countries, such as Germany?
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Methodology

The research project follows a mixed-methods approach, including: discourse analysis. in depth interviews, surveys, media analysis

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Status

This project is currently in the Data Collection, Data Analysis and Writing phases.

Expected completion date: March 2026

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Partners

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Outcomes

Publications:

Triadafilopoulos, P., Banting, K., & Westlake, D. (2025). . Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.

Past events and presentations:

  • "Competing problematizations of virtual naturalization ceremonies", presented by Lisa Brunner, Carolina Reyes Marquez, and Nadezhda Zezyulina, CMS Research Conference 2025, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, May 1-2, 2025
  • 鈥淒rivers of diversity: How Germany became more open鈥, co-authored with Karen Sch枚nw盲lder, presented by Phil Triadafilopoulos, Workshop on Openness, Human Rights, and Equality in European Migration and Diversity 鈥 When and How They Have Been Advanced in European Migration Policies, G枚ttingen, Germany, May 2025
  • 鈥淐ompeting problematizations of virtual naturalization ceremonies,鈥 presented by Lisa Brunner, Carolina Reyes Marquez, and Nadezhda Zezyulina, CMS Research Conference 2025, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, May 1-2, 2025
  • 鈥淪eeing light in dark times: Karen Sch枚nw盲lder and the political sociology of migration and diversity鈥, keynote address by Phil Triadafilopoulos, Conference on the Career of Karen Sch枚nw盲lder, Berlin, Germany, March 2025
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Keywords

Citizenship; migrant naturalization; national identity; naturalization ceremonies

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In the 'Content of Citizenship' Sub-Theme: