The Racialization of Latino Immigrants in New Destinations: Criminality, Ascription, and Countermobilization

Title

The Racialization of Latino Immigrants in New Destinations: Criminality, Ascription, and Countermobilization

Creator

Brown, Hana, E
Jones, Jennifer, A
Becker, Andrea

Subject

Latino Immigration
Race and Equality

Description

This article analyzes patterns in Latino immigrant racialization in the U.S. South. Drawing on a unique dataset of more than 4,200 news stories from the region, we find that Latino immigrants face multifaceted racialization in the news media and that this racialization shares substantive similarities with African American racialization processes. The most dominant negative characterizations of Mexican and Latino immigrants focus on their perceived criminal tendencies. Claims of Latino criminality apply implicitly coded racial language about black criminality to new Latino arrivals. A close qualitative analysis of these trends reveals an ongoing cycle of racialization in which immigration foes challenge Latino or Mexican immigrants as criminal elements and immigration advocates respond with charges of racism and discrimination. Supplemental analyses from four African American newspapers suggest that black elites perceive Latinos as sharing a common experience of racial discrimination at the hands of whites.

Publisher

The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences

Date

2018–8

Type

Text
Journal Article

Format

PDF

Identifier

https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7758/rsf.2018.4.5.06

Language

English

Files

PDhistory source .pdf

Citation

Brown, Hana, E, Jones, Jennifer, A, and Becker, Andrea, “The Racialization of Latino Immigrants in New Destinations: Criminality, Ascription, and Countermobilization,” Santa Clara University Digital Exhibits, accessed February 6, 2025, https://dh.scu.edu/exhibits/items/show/2942.

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