The Right to Our Past
Community Approaches to Access and Repair of Chinese Immigration Records in Canada’s National Archives
Abstract
Chinese immigration records held by Library and Archives Canada document over six decades of exclusionary federal policy, including the head tax and the Chinese Immigration Act, 1923. Created as technologies of racial control, these records enacted material and affective harm at the moments of their creation and continue to shape Chinese Canadians’ encounters with archives today. This article examines the open-access Chinese Immigration (CI) record types, focusing in particular on the newly released CI 44 registration forms produced under section 18 of the 1923 Act. Drawing on archival theory, legal history, and community-led genealogical practice, this article argues that Chinese immigration records are hateful, harmful, and injurious records that require both archival repair and reparations. Tracing a pattern in which community labour has repeatedly preceded institutional action, the article calls for a reparation-oriented custodial practice grounded in accountability, equitable resourcing, and responsive stewardship.
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