Politics and Prejudice: Using the Term “Undocumented Immigrant” over “Illegal Immigrant”

Author(s):  
Adam Henry Callister ◽  
Quinn Galbraith ◽  
Alexandra Carlile
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin Lee Nelson ◽  
Patricia Davis-Wiley

This purpose of this study was to analyze the terms illegal alien, illegal immigrant, and undocumented immigrant in order to determine if these legal synonyms exhibit pragmatic differences in actual practice found in American media. Studies have reported that differences in terminology, metaphor, and discourse framing largely serve to dehumanize or empower immigrants for partisan purposes in legal language (Johnson 1996), politics (Mehan 1997), and in the media (Santa Ana, 1999). Given the semantic presumption of criminality with the terms illegal alien and illegal immigrant, it can be argued that undocumented immigrant is used in more positive contexts in the media when compared with the terms illegal alien or illegal immigrant. In order to test this theory, the authors used the Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA, 2016) to analyze the frequency, presumption of criminality in context, and different media outlets’ use of illegal alien, illegal immigrant, and undocumented immigrant. Results of this study found that the terms illegal immigrant and illegal alien have been used significantly more in American media than the term undocumented immigrant, although that trend appears to be shifting. While there was little difference in the presumption of criminality with illegal immigrant and undocumented immigrant, contexts using illegal alien assumed criminality twice as often as the other terms. Fox News and CNN used terms with illegal much more than any other group, although CNN has largely phased the terms out of use in recent years; NPR used the term undocumented immigrant significantly more than other media.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 73-81
Author(s):  
Santhosh Chandrashekar
Keyword(s):  

Through an analysis of the indie movie For Here or To Go? this essay argues that the rhetoric of “unfairness” articulated by Indian tech workers not only elides privileges, but also increasingly relies on the figure of the illegal immigrant to perform injury and to shore up claims of desirability and inclusion. Although constructed using juridical-legal logics of legality/illegality, the illegal immigrant mirrors racial, gender, and other anxieties that are mobilized to constitute migrant illegality. By examining how economically-privileged immigrants produce the dehumanization of less-privileged groups, this essay hopes to demystify the unequal position of groups within contemporary migration.


2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 10-19
Author(s):  
Joaquin S. Aganza ◽  
Angélica Gamboa ◽  
Elizabeth Medina ◽  
Stephanie Vuelvas

2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 413-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cassie L. Barnhardt ◽  
Kimberly Reyes ◽  
Angela Vidal Rodriguez ◽  
Marisol Ramos

The Southeastern United States is home to one of the most culturally resistant arenas for undocumented immigrant students to pursue postsecondary education. Using a transformative mixed methods approach, we explore the multidimensional dynamics of contention that are present as campus administrators navigate the process of serving a group of students who are marginalized due to their unresolved immigration status. Our article contributes to the methodological literature by exemplifying how transformative mixed methods are powerful tools for understanding how the oppression of vulnerable populations is institutionalized in organizational settings.


Author(s):  
Jessamyn Hatcher

This chapterexamines a group of undocumented immigrant women from Nepal who wear fast fashion to labor at their body service jobs in a New York City nail salon. Contrary to the idea that consuming fast fashion is a leisure activity, this chapter suggests that fast-fashion consumption is a mandated form of uncompensated labor. In the case of these workers, they are explicitly required to dress fashionably for a job that is underpaid, toxic, and rough on clothes. Despite this, workers insist that wearing these clothes holds important affective meanings that exceed their boss’s imperative, described by one as “little freedoms.” An investigation of little freedoms points toward the larger structural ways all fast-fashion workers are shaped by this quintessential form of labor under global capitalism; exemplifies the delimited forms of freedom possible within it; points toward important forms of difference between workers; and offers clues to fast-fashion makers’ other, longed for, and potentially more enabling futures.


2018 ◽  
pp. 376-400
Author(s):  
Frank Anthony Rodriguez ◽  
Vivian J. Dorsett ◽  
John Jacob Rodriguez

2021 ◽  
pp. 255-257
Author(s):  
Walter E. Block
Keyword(s):  

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