Dear all,
I have a query that I was wondering about
If as everyone indicates, that employment or being employed or not doesnt impact the citizenshp application then why does IRCC ask about?
it has to be of relevance right?
There is no employment requirement, to be eligible for a grant of citizenship. A PR's eligibility for citizenship does NOT depend on employment in Canada.
Employment history, like address history, is a key indicator of where a person was primarily located during the respectively reported period of time. They are both evidence relevant to the question of actual physical presence.
Employment in Canada is additionally considered a significant tie to Canada and thus in this respect is also indirectly relevant to actual physical presence in Canada. Ties in Canada tend to support claims (reports) of presence in Canada. Absence of ties in Canada will naturally invite questions about the extent of the individual's presence in Canada.
WHOLE PICTURE and CREDIBILITY CONSIDERATION:
Every item of information given in the application can be and in most respects will be considered in context and compared to all the other information . . . to all the other information provided in the application itself, all the other information IRCC has in the client's GCMS, and any other information IRCC might access and consider in evaluating the application.
On one hand, looming large, this is indeed about credibility screening.
Consider-in-context-and-compare has been the most widely used tool for screening immigration applications of all kinds for a very, very long time. Until extensive and virtually pervasive fraud in citizenship applications was discovered in 2008 to 2010, it appears to have been the primary tool employed.
Basically that approach evaluated the internal consistency of every element of information provided by the applicant, and also evaluated the credibility, the believability, of the whole picture. If there was nothing triggering a reason-to-question-residence, CIC/IRCC largely relied on the applicant's information. Any reason-to-question-residence appeared from this assessment, then there was RQ.
This process almost certainly continues today with some additional cross-checking and further inquiries for collateral information. For example, GCMS checks can be done, now, for particular employers and addresses, to identify whether or not those have been identified as related to previous fraud cases. Open sources, like LinkedIn, may also be accessed and considered.