Richard Joy
Richard J. Joy (1924 – June 26, 1998) was the author of several books on Canadian language demographics. In 1967, he self-published the groundbreaking book, Languages in Conflict: The Canadian Experience, in which he used statistics from the 1961 census to demonstrate a number of points which ran counter to the accepted wisdom of the day:
Birthrates in Quebec were plunging, which meant that the French language could no longer keep pace with English purely through natural increase;
French was in serious decline outside of Quebec and a bilingual belt stretching eastwards into New Brunswick and west into eastern and north-eastern Ontario;
English was in decline in all parts of Quebec other than Montreal.
Based on these considerations, Joy came to the following sombre conclusion:
In 1972, the book was re-published by Carleton University Press.
Joy updated his findings periodically, based on the results of the most recent decennial census. His second book, Canada's Official Language Minorities, was published by the C.D. Howe Institute in 1978.