I think we are talking about two different things. First of all, the 1951 convention definition of a refugee has not changed. It has been reaffirmed by the global compact on refugees. What's pointed to in the document, however, is a reference to mixed migration. This is something that we as governments and other nations have been aware of for quite some time.
Mixed migration means that people are moving from state to state. There could be refugees. There could be economic migrants within those flows as well. What the Government of Canada's resettlement program takes into account is that complexity within the situation. That is why we have, among our resettled individuals, those who are defined as refugees, and it's also why we have exceptional public policies, which the minister can utilize at his discretion to bring in those who are, for example, IDPs, such as we saw with the survivors of Daesh..