Well it's an open work permit, so they may grant it for longer than the job offer. If your passport expires during those 2 years, it would affect when the work permit expires as well.
I don't know much about it: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/immigrate-canada/rural-northern-immigration-pilot/pr-eligibility.html
Let me try to answer your questions:
You can mail your passport. But I'd courier it or at least epxress mail. You need a tracking number as you don't want it getting lost.
I suspect this will not be efficient and the answer you will likely get is not the one you want.
So let's say you applied for jobs in the Canadian travel industry, say organizing trips to Egypt. And you got your work permit and worked here. And you were good at it and got promoted into some kind of management role. Then you could apply for PR.
Yes, you can apply for a passport. You need her birth certificate, your parents' marriage certificate and your birth certificate listing your names (and any translations necessary).
It's not compulsory to work in the same job. They use your work experience to evaluate how hard it would be for you to find work here.
Basically you need a job offer and then you can work here for a while and then apply for PR (provided you get a skilled job).
A) Yes, you should not apply when you personally are outside of Canada.
B) She can apply for a visitor visa now or at any time in the future and you do not have to be in Canada yet for her to apply. Whether or not it's approved depends upon her stated reasons for coming, the invitation letter...
There are three main categories for PR:
Federal Skilled Worker (education plus work experience)
Federal Skilled Trades (trades certification plus work experience)
Canadian Experience Class (Canadian work experience)
Which you qualify for depends upon your job and education.
But the short...
Yes, you could get married in Kazakhstan and, if she can get a visitor visa to Canada, sponsor her inland. You don't have to "register" the marriage in Canada but you will have to get the marriage certificate translated into English or French and have the translation notarized.
IRCC is very...
If it's revoked when she's outside of Canada, I do not believe she can appeal. However, an alternative possibility is they let her in and investigate her status and in that case she could appeal.
The LMIA takes the most amount of time.
You can check processing times here: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/application/check-processing-times.html
You can apply for it yourself is you have the LMIA from the employer. Here is the website...
That is a really good question and I am sorry to say I do not know the answer.
My guess would be that, if the income is additional to the work you are doing on your closed work permit, this is not an issue. They are concerned about people applying for work permits who then do not work for...
I would strongly suggest not to renew your PR Cards until you have at least three years in Canada.
Yes, the official requirement is 2 years.
But in our experience applicants who just barely meet the residence requirement have their applications investigated at a way, way higher rate than...
"Inland" and "outland" refer to the location of the sponsored spouse/partner, not the location of the sponsor.
If the sponsor is outside of Canada there is a further burden of proof to demonstrate that you will immigrate to Canada. To the best of our knowledge, these types of applications are...