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      Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
      Ko e fakatahá ni ʻoku ʻi he ʻinitanetí
      Ko e fakatahá ni ʻoku kau tonu ki ai
      Naʻe pulusi ʻa e sēsiní ʻi he 2025

      Uncovering Transnational Ties: Genealogy of US and Canadian Migrations

      Our ancestors living in North America likely were part of immigration movements that took them back and forth across the international border between Canada and the United States. These movements by ethnic groups, motivated by wars/conflicts, working conditions and economic circumstances, followed patterns and left records documenting these families. Finding these migratory trails is the focus of this session and records, websites and information about broad categories of these movements will be provided in the syllabus and presentation.

      Syllabus for Uncovering Transnational Ties: Genealogy of US and Canadian Migrations

      Fakamatala ne Fokotuʻu Maí


      Thumbnail ki he Research in Canada: An Introduction
      Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
      Ko e fuoloa ʻo e vitioó ko e 1:08:08
      Naʻe pulusi ʻa e sēsiní ʻi he 2024

      Research in Canada: An Introduction

      Jacqueline Kanyuck

      Thumbnail ki he So, You’ve Got a Canadian Ancestor, Eh?
      Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
      Ko e fuoloa ʻo e vitioó ko e 59:05
      Naʻe pulusi ʻa e sēsiní ʻi he 2025

      So, You’ve Got a Canadian Ancestor, Eh?

      Kathryn Lake Hogan

      Thumbnail ki he Library and Archives Canada and the 1931 Canada Census
      Ko e lea fakafonua ki he fakatahá ni ko e English
      Ko e fuoloa ʻo e vitioó ko e 59:35
      Naʻe pulusi ʻa e sēsiní ʻi he 2024

      Library and Archives Canada and the 1931 Canada Census

      Emily Oldroyd

      Kau ʻi he Fepōtalanoaʻakí