Standing in the Doorway: Representations and Realities of Punjabi International Students in Canada

Lilach Marom
, Paul Fontaine
, Lisa Ruth Brunner
, Gagun Chhina

Abstract

This article examines the construction of international students, particularly Punjabi international students, in Canadian policies and mainstream media discourses post–COVID-19. It then juxtaposes these representations with the perspectives of students themselves, as captured through a survey with Punjabi international students transitioning out of British Columbia colleges and teaching universities. Our analysis reveals the fraught dialectic between the policy landscape, media discourses, and Punjabi international students’ trajectories. On a policy level, when international students are perceived to hold high economic value with low social costs, they are welcomed; when that perception shifts, they are “Othered.” Similarly, media discourses represent Punjabi international students in complex and often contradictory ways as victims, system abusers, commodities, and strains on infrastructure. In contrast, Punjabi international students largely see themselves as young people striving to build better futures, buying into the “Canadian dream” while simultaneously navigating processes that render them vulnerable to exploitation and Othering.

Published

2026-05-25


Keywords

Punjabi international students, media analysis, international students, colleges, edugration, Punjab, student trajectory



Section

Special issue: From recruitment to restrictions: A new policy era for international students in Canadian higher education



License

Copyright (c) 2026 Lilach Marom, Paul Fontaine, Lisa Ruth Brunner, Gagun Chhina

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How to Cite

Marom, L. ., Fontaine, P., Brunner, L. R. ., & Chhina, G. . (2026). Standing in the Doorway: Representations and Realities of Punjabi International Students in Canada. Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 56(2), 35–51. https://doi.org/10.47678/cjhe.v56i2.191089