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A Rationale for Changing Bill 101
Author/contributor
Title
A Rationale for Changing Bill 101
Abstract
The adoption of three linguistic laws in less than ten
years, under three different governments, testifies to numerous social and political changes experienced in Quebec since the onset of the quiet revolution. Bill 63, (1969), Bill 22, (1974) and, more recently Bill 101, (August 1977) attest to the rapid advancement of the Francophone
community's demands re: language which are applicable to all of the residents of Quebec.
For many this evolution exemplifies the need for self-assertion and identity long held in check by a system of social values which favored the introversion of the French Canadian collectivity thus keeping it aloof from the socio-economic mainstream of Canadian life in North America.
Date
October 15, 1979
Pages
33
Language
en
Rights
You are not authorized to use or reproduce this work for any commercial purpose or to further distribute, perform, or alter works in any way without express permission of the owner of the copyright or proxy.
Citation
La Commission des écoles catholiques de Montrèal. A Rationale for Changing Bill 101, October 15, 1979.
Geographical area
Type
Contributing CKOL partner
Link to this record
Partenaire participant à la BOSC lié à cette ressource
Fédération québécoise des associations foyer-école, inc. (QFHSA)
Fondation :
1944
Public cible :
Secteur de l’éducation en anglais du Québec, de la maternelle à la 5e secondaire
Site Web :
http://www.qfhsa.org/
Activités :
Activités d’alphabétisation; activités pédagogiques; ateliers sur le leadership; ateliers sur le rôle parental
Anciens noms :
[Fusion entre] le Québec Provincial Council of Home and Schools et les Greater Montréal Federation of Home and School Associations; Quebec Federation of Protestant Home and School Associations