Authors
Irene Browne, Natalie Delia Deckard, Cassaundra Rodriguez
Publication date
2016/8/1
Journal
The Sociological Quarterly
Volume
57
Issue
3
Pages
520-543
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Description
This article compares the discourse on immigration found in Atlanta's African-American press (Atlanta Daily World) to that found in Atlanta's mainstream press (Atlanta Journal-Constitution). The Daily World's black counterdiscourse situates immigration within a racial frame, discussing Latinos and immigrants interchangeably and casting African Americans as deserving yet excluded citizens. Immigrants appear in the Daily World as either allies in the struggle for civil rights or as competitors for jobs. Although the Daily World crime frames focus on concerns about racial profiling, the Journal-Constitution often depicts immigrants as criminals or discusses immigration in terms of legal status and policy.
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