Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
New Brunswick has typically experienced less emigration than its size and economic situation would suggest, probably because of the low rate of emigration of its Francophone population. [1] New Brunswick was predicted to continue low or negative population growth in the long term due to interprovincial migration and a low birth rate.
The Société de l'Acadie du Nouveau-Brunswick (SANB), known in English as the Acadian Society of New Brunswick, is an organization representing Francophones and Acadians in New Brunswick, [1] the only bilingual province in Canada and the largest Acadian population in the country. [2]
It is charged with the relations between New Brunswick and other provinces, the federal government, and for international relations such as its involvement in the Council of New England Governors and Eastern Canadian Premiers and La Francophonie. The department was established on June 21, 1999, when Premier Bernard Lord took office.
It was originally founded as the Office of Francophone Affairs (French: Office des affaires francophones) in 1986 by the government of David Peterson, [3] as an expansion of the former Office of the Government Coordinator of French-Language Services. [4] It was upgraded to a full ministry in 2017 by the government of Kathleen Wynne. [5]
For example, education being a provincial domain, New Brunswick has a Minister of Education, while the federal Cabinet would not. The Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick , as representative of the King in Right of New Brunswick , appoints the Premier and the Executive Council of whichever party forms government in a given legislature, which ...
Le Collège communautaire du Nouveau-Brunswick-Campus de Dieppe is a francophone post-secondary higher education institution. CCNB-Dieppe opened to the public in 1987. Its English-language counterpart, NBCC Moncton campus, situated on Mountain Road in Moncton, is the largest of the NBCC system. The province has two autonomous English and French ...
This category is for colleges and universities in New Brunswick that offer French as the primary language of instruction for some or all students. It does not include schools which happen to offer French as a second language (since that is the norm).
The Government of New Brunswick (French: Gouvernement du Nouveau-Brunswick) is the provincial government of the province of New Brunswick. Its powers and structure are set out in the Constitution Act, 1867 .