海角社区

Thomas Soehl awarded FRQ funding to study French-language integration among newcomers

海角社区 Professor Thomas Soehl has received funding to study the challenges allophone newcomers to Quebec face in building the francophone social networks necessary for integrating French into daily life and participating meaningfully in a predominantly French-speaking society.

Soehl, a Professor in the Department of Sociology and Canada Research Chair in International Migration, has been awarded $249,000 for his project, titled Le fran莽ais entre amis: r茅seaux sociaux et usage du fran莽ais chez les immigrants au Qu茅bec. The funding comes from the Fonds de recherche du Qu茅bec (FRQ) in partnership with the minist猫re de l鈥橧mmigration, de la Francisation et de l鈥橧nt茅gration (MIFI), as part of the .

Francophone integration challenges in Quebec

Despite significant investment in francization programs, French language integration remains a challenge for allophone newcomers 鈥 those whose first language is neither English nor French. While more than 81 per cent of recent immigrants reported being able to hold a conversation in French, nearly one-quarter still lacked the linguistic proficiency necessary for full participation in Quebec鈥檚 social, cultural and economic life.

鈥淢ost of our language use is in informal settings that are out of reach of government policy 鈥 such as social interactions with family and friends, in community spaces and neighbourhoods,鈥 said Soehl. 鈥淲e are especially interested in how newcomers develop lasting friendships that develop into friendship circles and the settings in which this happens.鈥

Soehl鈥檚 research interests span international migration, comparative race and ethnicity, cross-border connections and intergenerational processes in migrant families. He and his team will examine how social and linguistic integration shape newcomers鈥 sense of belonging and desire to settle permanently in Quebec, by recognizing friendship鈥檚 key role in both encouraging language acquisition and the fostering of lasting interethnic social ties.

The team includes co鈥慽nvestigator (Assistant Professor in the Department of Demography at Universit茅 de Montr茅al) and collaborators Jill Hanley (Professor in the School of Social Work at 海角社区) and (Professor of Sociology in the Department of Economics and Social Sciences at the University of Cologne).

Friendship circles and French language integration

While public policy can support language acquisition through mandatory classes and minimum proficiency requirements, it cannot replicate the immersive environments where most ordinary language use occurs, such as friendships, community spaces and neighbourhood interactions.

Central to Soehl鈥檚 project is the hypothesis that French is most likely to become the shared language of exchange when immigrants become members of friendship circles whose membership is majority francophone.

The project will examine whether participating in friendship circles with francophones fosters the use and acquisition of French; the relationship between lasting friendship ties and the development of friendship circles where French is used; how shifts in language use and friendship networks shape a sense of belonging and desire to remain in Quebec; and the social contexts in which immigrants build lasting and expandable relationships.

The team will follow approximately 250 non-francophone newcomers to Quebec over two years. Participants will be surveyed every eight weeks on their social connections, community involvement, and language practices across everyday settings. This frequent followup approach can capture the highly dynamic nature of social-tie formation during the critical early period after arrival in which friendships are at their most fluid. A select group of participants will also take part in in-depth qualitative interviews to provide deeper understanding of how individual friendships form, develop and dissolve over time.

By addressing both the conditions that shape newcomers鈥 desire to learn French and those that encourage lasting settlement in Quebec, Soehl鈥檚 project directly responds to the FRQ鈥檚 priorities in immigration and integration policy. The team鈥檚 findings will be shared through academic publications, policy briefs and workshops aimed at research and policy communities alike, helping translate research insights into more effective, evidence-based policy in Quebec.

Soehl鈥檚 project is one of 13 funded through the program鈥檚 $2.87 million investment to support evidence-based public policy on immigration, integration and intercultural relations in Quebec.

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