I'm going to again provide two quick answers to those helpful comments.
The first is that in most of the other countries I mentioned, naming or selection is not a feature of the sponsorship model. In the United Kingdom; in Germany, which is not yet online but will be with a 500-person pilot; in Argentina; in Ireland, soon to be online; they will be taking UNHCR-referred refugees and putting them into sponsorship groups in the same way we do with our BVOR program. They are taking the BVOR part of Canada's program and putting that version of it into their own communities.
All of this is to say, I don't think the benefits of sponsorship are contingent on choice. I think there's a number of other policy discussions around whether choice is useful, particularly to accomplish policy goals like family reunification where there's a lack of other infrastructure. I want to separate that conversation from the conversation of the benefits of engaging community.
The second is around how to measure success. It's an excellent question. There have been imperfect metrics that vary significantly by country. Is integration success about employment, early employment, language acquisition, how the kids are doing in school, whether the family is out in the community and engaging? If so, how do we measure all these things?
It's a very active debate. People agree that Canada is a world leader in integration but when you look at the metrics being used it's apples to oranges in many different jurisdictions.
I think sponsorship forces us to add a different series of questions, not only around integration but also the degree of community acceptance. What has the experience of the community been?
When we've been looking at the introduction of sponsorship programs globally and then considering what's happening in Canada as part of that work, we're interested not only in counting resettlement spaces but also counting the number of people who have been touched in a positive way by supporting the newcomer. That is a different way of conceiving resettlement. I want to emphasize from my opening comments that Canada has been doing this, and no one else has. When we look at the collapse of the U.S. resettlement system at this moment, the lack of community engagement has been a crippling component of what is happening there.
In Canada two million to 10 million people have been engaged in refugee protection. The United States has had a much bigger, a much more professionalized system and has had a fraction of the number of people engaged. That's been a real weakness of that system.
I want to emphasize metrics not only about refugee success but also around community success. Do our communities welcome this? Are they being supported in this act of welcome and integration?