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                  <text>The Racialization of Latino Immigrants in New Destinations: Criminality, Ascription,
and Countermobilization
Author(s): Hana E. Brown, Jennifer A. Jones and Andrea Becker
Source: RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences , August 2018,
Vol. 4, No. 5, Immigration and Changing Identities (August 2018), pp. 118-140
Published by: Russell Sage Foundation
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.com/stable/10.7758/rsf.2018.4.5.06
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�The Racialization of Latino
Immigrants in New
Destinations: Criminality,
Ascription, and
Countermobilization
H a na E. Brow n, Jen n ifer A. Jon es, a n d A n dr e a Beck er
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.
Keywords: race, immigration, South, Latinos, criminalization, racialization

Due in large part to immigration, the Latino
share of the U.S. population has increased dramatically in recent years. Latinos now make up
16 percent of the U.S. population, accounting
for half of the nation’s growth demographic in

the past decade (Passel, Cohn, and Lopez 2011).
By 2050, demographers project that the Latino
population will have doubled to more than one
hundred million (Krogstad 2015). Thanks to
these transformations, a vigorous debate has

Hana E. Brown is associate professor of sociology at Wake Forest University. Jennifer A. Jones is assistant
professor of sociology at the University of Notre Dame. Andrea Becker is a PhD student in sociology at Vanderbilt University.
© 2018 Russell Sage Foundation. Brown, Hana E., Jennifer A. Jones, and Andrea Becker. 2018. “The Racialization
of Latino Immigrants in New Destinations: Criminality, Ascription, and Countermobilization.” RSF: The Russell
Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 4(5): 118–40. DOI: 10.7758/RSF.2018.4.5.06. The authors would
like to thank Felicia Arriaga, Ann Hollingsworth, Christina Lawrence, Robert Reece, and Nura Sediqe for their
research assistance. Funding for this research was provided by a Russell Sage Presidential Authority Award
(#88-­14-­05) and grants from the National Science Foundation (SES-­1728780), University of Notre Dame, and
Wake Forest University. The first two authors are equal co-­authors, listed in alphabetical order. Direct correspondence to: Hana E. Brown at brownhe@wfu.edu, Department of Sociology, Wake Forest University, Box 7808,
1834 Wake Forest Rd., Winston-­Salem, NC 27109; Jennifer A. Jones at jjones23@nd.edu, Department of Sociology, University of Notre Dame, 749 Flanner Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46556; and Andrea Becker at andrea.beccker
@vanderbilt.edu, Department of Sociology, Vanderbilt University, PMB 351811, Nashville, TN 37235.
Open Access Policy: RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences is an open access journal.
This article is published under a Creative Commons Attribution-­NonCommercial-­NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

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�t he r aci a liz at ion of l at ino immigr a n ts

emerged about the role that Latino immigrants
occupy in the U.S. racial hierarchy (Bonilla-­Silva
2004; Chavez 2008; Lee and Bean 2004). Will
Latinos join African Americans as collective minorities? Are they assimilating into whiteness?
Or will Latinos occupy a distinctive racial position between whites and African Americans?
These questions have taken on particular importance in the U.S. South, a region long characterized by stark black-­white divisions and
now home to the fastest growth Latino population in the nation (Kochhar, Suro, and Tafoya
2005).
Most work on these questions draws either
from large-­scale analyses of survey data (Frank,
Akresh, and Lu 2010; Golash-­Boza 2006) or on
qualitative case studies focused on a single locale (Marrow 2011; Ribas 2015). Recognizing
that the media are a critical site of racial formation (Omi and Winant 1994) and an important
aspect of the context of reception (Menjívar
2016), we analyze patterns in Latino immigrant
racialization in Southern news coverage. Our
analyses of immigrant racialization draw from
a unique dataset of more than 4,200 news stories from 2003 to 2013 from eight newspapers
across four new destination states: Alabama,
Georgia, Mississippi, and North Carolina.
Results indicate that Latino immigrants face
multifaceted racialization in the news media
and that this racialization is, in key ways, consistent in substance and form with that faced
by African Americans. Rather than focus on immigrants as economic threats, the most dominant negative characterizations of Mexican immigrants and of Central and South American
immigrants focus on their perceived criminal
tendencies. Moreover, claims of Latino criminality apply implicitly coded racial language
about black criminality to new Latino arrivals
(Alexander 2012; Mendelberg 2001). Our results
further suggest that pro-­immigration forces
also racialize Latinos, albeit differently. Despite
much evidence that immigrants use economic
arguments to make claims for various rights
(Deckard and Browne 2016), we find that an
equally if not more common argument made
to defend Latino immigrants in Southern newspapers is that they face racism and discrimination. The writers, editorial board members, and

119

political figures making these arguments routinely draw parallels between immigration enforcement efforts and the South’s historic commitment to racial inequality, Jim Crow, and
segregation. 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 of 476 news stories from
the largest African American newspapers in
these states reveal that these newspapers portray immigrants much more positively than
mainstream newspapers do. Our results further
suggest that African American political and cultural elites perceive Latinos as sharing a common experience of racial discrimination at the
hands of whites.
These findings suggest that, at this historical juncture, Latinos are not uniformly assimilating into whiteness. Rather, in key ways, Latinos in the South face racialization as collective
minorities. Our results also suggest a need for
renewed attention to the role that the social
distinctions of place play in shaping ideas
about race. Moreover, they indicate that making sense of the racially transformative effects
of immigration requires a nuanced understanding of the racialization process. Existing
research largely emphasizes explicit micro patterns of immigrant racial self-­identification
and macro patterns of state ascription (but see
Mora 2014). Although important, this focus neglects the effects that pro-­immigration forces,
meso-­level organizations, and implicit racial
appeals have on immigrants’ place in and adjustment to U.S. race relations and racial hierarchies.
R aci a li z at i o n , I m m i g r at i o n , a n d
N e w I m m i g r a n t D e s t i n at i o n s

Over the course of U.S. history, racial dynamics
and immigration trends have been closely intertwined (Calavita 2007; Lee 2002; Molina
2013). Immigration patterns not only affect individual and collective self-­identification, they
influence intergroup relations, racial hierarchies, and racialized public policies (Lee and
Bean 2004, 2012). Contemporary questions

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�120

Immigr ation a nd Ch a nging Iden tities

about Latino racialization emerge from this
broader entanglement of racial formation processes and immigration trends and settlement
patterns.1
To assess the effect of immigration on racial
formation requires a foundational recognition
of the socially constructed nature of racial categories and groups. Racial meanings vary from
society to society as well as overtime within a
particular geographic and social context. These
shifts arise in part due to racialization processes that make racial distinctions and schemas “common sense—a way of comprehending, explaining, and acting in the world” (Omi
and Winant 1994, 60). Racialization, in Frantz
Fanon’s formulation of the term, referred to
colonialism’s erasure of intragroup differences
and its imposition of racial categories onto previously distinct groups (2004). Today, racialization “signals the processes by which ideas
about race are constructed, come to be regarded as meaningful, and are acted upon”
(Murji and Solomos 2005, 1).
Race and stratification scholars generally
concur that racialization involves the mutually
constitutive processes of ascription and identification (Brodkin 1998; Brown and Jones 2015;
Nobles 2000). Ascription involves the application of arbitrary and usually phenotypic characteristics to lump together individuals into a
meaningful social category. This process creates a common sense assumption of shared
characteristics used to legitimate specific patterns of resource allocation and exploitation
(Lacayo 2017). The identificational element of
racialization involves acceptance of this designation, often for mobilization or identity construction (Espiritu 1993; Okamoto and Mora
2014; Omi and Winant 1994).
U.S. research on racialization has focused
heavily on black-­white racial dynamics, but racial formation involves groups such as Latinos
as well. Since at least the mid-­nineteenth century, Latino racialization patterns have shifted
in response to political, legal, and demographic
actions (Jimenez 2009; Mora 2014; Oboler 1995;
Portes and Rumbaut 2001; Rodriguez 2000;

Rumbaut 2011; Sommers 1991). The 1848 Treaty
of Guadalupe Hidalgo classified Mexican-­origin
people as legally white regardless of ancestry.
However, this classification did not translate
into social acceptance as whites (Gutiérrez
1995; Haney-­Lopez 1997; Montejano 1987). As a
result, the first half of the twentieth century
involved constant social and political negotiations over the racial status of Latin American
and Caribbean origin individuals. Latin American and Caribbean origin peoples in the
United States found themselves alternately subject to Jim Crow, segregation, and exclusion on
the one hand, and the beneficiaries of resource
access and protections not afforded to African
Americans and Asian Americans on the other,
depending on origin, phenotype, and location
of settlement (FitzGerald and Cook-­Martin
2014; Hattam 2007; Ngai 2005). The racial positioning of Mexican Americans in particular varied by geography, by time period, and even by
institutional setting (Fox and Guglielmo 2012).
After the passage of the 1965 Immigration
Act, migration from Latin American countries
swelled, and Latino identity and racialization
took on new political significance. Motivated
in part by a desire to eliminate legalized racial
discrimination in both civil rights and immigration law, the law shifted the allocation of
visas. With few visas available to immigrants
from the Western hemisphere, Latinos, especially Mexicans and Central Americans, became
further connected in the collective imaginary
to “illegal” or undocumented immigration. In
the 1990s and 2000s, various geopolitical and
economic shifts such as the North American
Free Trade Agreement set off unprecedented
migration flows, marking an explosive period
of Latino population growth in the United
States that was compounded by high fertility
rates among U.S.-­based Latinos (Massey, Durand, and Malone 2003).
This period also witnessed a fundamental
shift in the settlement patterns of Latino in­
dividuals in the United States. Thanks to new
economic opportunities and heightened immigration enforcement in some traditional des-

1. Whether Latinos constitute a race is much debated. We argue that Latinos experience racializing processes
that homogenize a diverse population, institutionalize categories in a status hierarchy, and unevenly distribute
resources along those lines (Browne and Odem 2012, 322).
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�t he r aci a liz at ion of l at ino immigr a n ts

tinations, Latino immigrants began settling in
large numbers in small towns and suburbs
across the nation (Massey 2008; Singer, Hardwick, and Brettell 2008). Southeastern states
such as Georgia and North Carolina saw massive increases in their Latino and foreign-­born
populations and now rank in the top ten in
terms of states with the highest population of
unauthorized immigrants (Massey 2008; Singer
2004; Singer, Hardwick, and Brettell 2008).
These demographic transformations raise old
questions about Latino racialization but in a
new context—the U.S. South. Given that racial
dynamics in the South have largely revolved
around black-­white relations and inequalities,
what position do Latinos occupy in the region’s
racial landscape? Some hypothesize that Latinos will join African Americans as collective
minorities (Jones 2012; Smith 2014). Others
highlight the possibility that Latinos will assimilate into whiteness (Alba 2016; Alba and
Islam 2009; Gans 2017; but see Vargas 2015) or
occupy a distinctive and possibly elevated racial
position between whites and blacks (Bonilla-­
Silva 2004; Frank, Akresh, and Lu 2010; Gans
1999; Alba and Islam 2009; Lee and Bean 2004;
Marrow 2011).
To address this question, a collection of
pathbreaking researchers have examined emergent racial dynamics on the ground in new immigrant destinations like the U.S. South. Focused largely on the early 2000s or periods
prior, these studies present evidence of black-­
brown tensions, conflict, and distancing. Although both blacks and whites at the time perceived Latinos as outsiders, African Americans
did so thanks in part to perceptions of resource
competition and long histories of interracial
hostility and resource competition (LeDuff
2000; Marrow 2011; Ribas 2015; Rich and Miranda 2005; Stuesse 2009). These results provide empirical support for the view that Latinos
occupy a racial middle. However, this interpretation depends on whether distancing is understood as a short-­term mobility strategy used
by immigrants throughout history to avoid association with blacks or a more lasting trian-

121

gulated position in which Latinos are neither
accepted by whites nor demoted to collective
blacks (Kim 1999; Roediger 2006). Further,
shifts in immigration enforcement priorities
and racial politics in the mid-­2000s may have
altered Latino racial incorporation trajectories
since these earlier studies were conducted
(Jones 2012; Marrow 2017; Williams 2016). Indeed, in the South today, traditional indicators
of racial incorporation, such as intermarriage
rates and residential segregation patterns,
show clear similarities between blacks and Latinos, suggesting possible shifts in racialization
processes on the ground in recent years (Frey
2015; Lofquist et al. 2012).2
Existing studies on these questions draw
largely on in-­depth ethnographic research that
provides a nuanced and powerful picture of
emergent race relations in individual communities. Although these are essential contributions to our understanding of the racializing
facets of immigration, the emphasis on individual community relations offers limited insights into the broader context in which the
dynamics of racialization and intergroup re­
lations occur, suggesting a need for cross-­
regional work. Moreover, because few of these
studies account for cultural and institutional
discourses, further work is required to understand the broader practices that drive ascriptive racialization and the location of Latinos
in the racial hierarchy (Chavez 2008; Chavez
2012; Mora 2014; Santa Ana 2002). This gap in
the research is consequential not only because
ascription is an essential component of racialization, but also because it plays an important
role in shaping race relations and social policy
(Browne, Deckard, and Rodriguez 2016; McConnell 2011).
Because the news media are an important
part of the context of reception (Menjívar 2016),
media analysis provides a useful opportunity
to address these gaps. As Eileen McConnell
notes, the mass media actively construct metaphors, ideologies, and beliefs about nonwhites
in the United States, often emphasizing a narrow range of negative topics that link racial mi-

2. Out-­marriage rates for blacks and Latinos are similarly low in the four states under study here (Lofquist et al.
2012). Hispanic and black residential segregation rates are also similar, with Hispanic-­white segregation indices
revealing increasing segregation in recent years (Frey 2015).
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�Immigr ation a nd Ch a nging Iden tities

122

norities with social problems (2011). This focus
shapes public perceptions of nonwhites as racialized nuisances and social threats. News media shape both conscious and unconscious biases about immigrants and racial minorities
(Haney-­Lopez 1997; Kaufmann 2003). For example, the media have powerfully shaped popular understandings of African Americans, portraying them as dangerous outsiders, predators,
and public menaces. These portrayals occur at
rates that are disproportionate to the actual
crime rate among African Americans, arise in
both fictional and nonfictional contexts, and
perpetuate stereotypes of pervasive criminality
and social threat (Chiricos and Eschholz 2002;
Dixon and Linz 2000b; Smiley and Fakunle
2016). The media in traditional immigrant destinations have also constructed Latinos and immigrants as existential threats to U.S. culture
and the nation-­state (Chavez 2008; De Genova
and Ramos-­Zayas 2003; McConnell 2011; Rodriguez 2000; Santa Ana 2002). Such representations characterize Latinos as unassimilable,
foreign, and an economic threat.
These media characterizations are not mere
expressions of grievances. They shape the ideologies and social understandings of local residents toward racial groups and toward immigration (Brown 2013; Domke 2000; Flores 2003;
Hopkins 2010). Because the media construct
and disseminate cultural frames that give
meaning to critical issues, they play a crucial
role in the racialization process and in immigration politics (Gilens 1999; Menjívar 2016; Rodriguez 2018). They also shape the attitudes of
bureaucrats, and policymakers who shape opportunities and access for these groups, closing
off opportunities for incorporation and upward
mobility (Dunaway, Branton, and Abrajano
2010; Sohoni and Mendez 2014). Examining
newspaper coverage in Oregon, José Padín argues that news media play a critical role in
shaping what he calls the “climate of new immigrant reception,” asserting that the media
frames Latinos relationally, positioning them
according to a set of normative racialized codes

that are used to distinguish or establish similarities to other groups (2005). Such processes
are deeply implicated in the construction of
local racial hierarchies and in the identity formation of Latinos, who may decide to contest
or accept this new set of ascriptive meanings
and definitions assigned to them (Dávila 2012;
Mora 2014).
Data a n d M e t h o d s

To assess Latino racialization in new destinations, we conducted a news media content analysis of more than 4,200 news stories from 2003
to 2013 from eight newspapers across the
South. The use of newspapers to analyze public
discourse is a long-­standing trend in the social
sciences. In recent years, newspaper circulation
has decreased, suggesting that newspaper
framing may have less public impact than previously. That said, ample evidence suggests that
that declining print subscriptions are counterbalanced by increases in online subscriptions
and readership (Mitchell and Rosenstiel 2012).
Studies also reveal that the content and framing of mainstream print, online, and social media news sources are relatively similar (Janssen
2010; O’Neill et al. 2015; Smith 2005). Given
these trends and parallel framing processes,
print media sources continue to present useful
data for the analysis of cultural framing and
public discourse.
We analyzed newspapers from four Southern states: Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, and
North Carolina.3 As table 1 shows, these four
states have witnessed rapid growth in their Latino and foreign-­born populations since 1990
(Migration Policy Institute 2012). Using Access
World News Database and the online archives
of the Jackson Clarion-­Ledger, we randomly sampled news stories per year from 2003 to 2013
from each of the two largest newspapers in
each state. To create these samples, we searched
for articles including the term immigra and retained only those that discussed immigration-­
related issues in the United States. We then
sampled from the eligible stories to retain fifty

3. The eight newspapers are the Jackson Clarion-­Ledger, the Biloxi Sun-­Herald, the Birmingham News, the Mobile
Press-­Register, the Atlanta Journal-­Constitution, the Augusta Chronicle, the Charlotte Observer, and the Raleigh
News and Observer.

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�t he r aci a liz at ion of l at ino immigr a n ts

123

Table 1. Foreign-Born Population and Change by State, 1990–2010
1990
Estimate

2000
Estimate

2010
Estimate

1990 to 2010
Percent Change

19,767,316
43,533
173,126
20,383
115,077

31,107,889
87,772
577,273
39,908
430,000

21,419,957
168,596
942,959
61,428
719,137

8.4
287.3
444.7
201.4
524.9

Region
United States
Alabama
Georgia
Mississippi
North Carolina

Source: Migration Policy Institute 2012.

stories per state per year for analysis. We did
so by taking every Nth story, where N equaled
the number of eligible stories that year divided
by fifty.
After compiling the dataset, we used Dedoose, a cloud-­based qualitative content analysis software, to code these stories. All codes
with less than 80 percent intercoder reliability
were dropped from the analysis. The average
for the retained codes was 98 percent agreement. The coding scheme included codes for
racial labels, immigrant country or region of
origin, speaker characteristics, positive and
negative characterizations of immigrants, and
article type and date. In addition to this specified analysis, we used the full universe of
news stories on immigration (approximately
twenty-­three thousand stories) to construct
broader histories of immigration and immigration policy in each state to provide context
for the study. We supplemented this analysis
with content analysis of immigration-­related
stories published in the one of the largest African American newspapers from each state.4
Following the same sampling and coding procedures as for the mainstream newspapers, we
compiled and analyzed a dataset of 476 additional news stories from the African American
newspapers. In what follows, we present results first from the mainstream newspapers,
highlighting trends in reporting of immigrants over time. We follow that discussion
with results from the African American newspapers.

L at i n o R aci a li z at i o n i n
M a i n s t r e a m N e w s pa p e r s

Results reveal consistent patterns in the characterizations of immigrants in mainstream
newspapers in the U.S. South. Table 2 presents
descriptive statistics for the most frequently occurring themes for each code category. Overall,
news stories contained slightly more negative
characterizations of immigrants than positive
ones. Approximately 31 percent of stories contained at least one negative characterization;
29 percent characterized immigrants positively.
The relative balance between positive and negative characterizations may well reflect the
long-­standing journalistic practices of seeking
multiple competing viewpoints to demonstrate
“objectivity” (Schudson 1981; American Press
Association 2017). Our results suggest, however,
that even if journalistic norms encourage reporters to balance both negative and positive
viewpoints on immigrants, the substance of
these viewpoints varies in important ways. Immigration advocates and opponents used distinct portrayals of immigrants that reveal complex and contested debate about the specific
characteristics of immigrants worthy of discussion.
The most common negative claim about immigrants emphasized the perceived criminal
tendencies of noncitizens; economic threat
claims were far less common. Nearly 60 percent
of the negative arguments made about immigrants involved judgments about immigrants’
involvement in criminal activities or their crim-

4. These newspapers include the Jackson Advocate, the Birmingham Times, the Atlanta Daily World, and the
Charlotte Post. Only the Atlanta Daily World is publicly available for our entire period, from 2003 to 2013. We
acknowledge these limitations when discussing our data from these newspapers.

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�Immigr ation a nd Ch a nging Iden tities

124

Table 2. Descriptive Statistics for Key Codes
Code

Total (N)

Frequency

Article type
Letter to editor
News reporting
Opinion
Total articles in categorya

320
2,857
1,033
4,208

0.08
0.68
0.25
1.00

Immigrant country or region
Central or South America
Mexico
Vietnam
Total articles in categorya

125
864
73
1,527

0.03
0.21
0.02
0.36

Negative immigrant
Crime
Drain collective resources
Steal jobs
Total articles in categorya

779
367
194

0.19
0.09
0.05

1,323

0.31

Positive immigrant
Hard work
Make collective resources
Racism or discrimination
Total articles in categorya

401
318
582
1,227

0.10
0.08
0.14
0.29

Race
Asian
Black
Latino or Hispanic
Total articles in categorya

104
428
982
1,245

0.02
0.10
0.23
0.30

Speaker
Federal official or politician
State, local elected official
Advocacy, service, nonprofit
Immigrant member of public
Total articles in categorya

384
535
464
365
1,590

0.09
0.13
0.11
0.09
0.38

Source: Authors’ compilation.
Total is the total number of articles with codes for that category. Because an
article might have references to multiple subcodes within a category, totals
are not the sum of all subcodes for the code category.
a

inal predispositions. This argument is exemplified by a 2005 piece in the Raleigh News and
Observer, which reported on crimes involving
local immigrants. The article noted that “Eight
illegal immigrants from Honduras pleaded
guilty Tuesday to federal charges related to a
multistate scheme to steal and resell more than
$2.5 million worth of baby formula and over-­
the-­counter drugs” (Weigl 2005). An article

from the Jackson Clarion-­Ledger in Mississippi
similarly highlighted the fact that the perpetrator of a local crime was an undocumented immigrant: “A police report shows the suspect in
the Wheaton hit-­and-­run is Jaime Martinez, an
illegal immigrant wanted for a homicide in
Mexico, who was driving a borrowed 1997 white
Cadillac” (Apel 2011). Like constructions of African Americans, these news stories portray im-

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�t he r aci a liz at ion of l at ino immigr a n ts

125

0.0050

0.25

0.0040

0.20

0.0030

0.15

0.0020

Crime characterizations
Violent crime rate

0.10

0.0010
0.0000

Crime Claims

Violent Crime Rate

Figure 1. Crime Claims by Year and Violent Crime Rate

0.05

2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

0.00

Source: Authors’ calculations.

migrants as dangerous menaces. Further, media elites opted for language and contextual
associations that depict illegal status as a criminal violation, despite the fact that unauthorized presence in the United States is a civil, not
a criminal, infraction. Although illegality could
be framed as a bureaucratic, legal, or administrative issue, by and large the news media chose
to frame illegality as a form of criminality.
These discussions of crime dwarfed the other
negative stereotypes about immigrants, despite
the fact that crime rates for immigrants and in
immigrant-­heavy areas are consistently lower
than in other areas (Ewing, Martinez, and Rumbaut 2016; Nowrasteh 2015; Rumbaut 2009). Indeed, as figure 1 shows, the prevalence of criminality claims in our data do not reflect any
shifts in the crime rate in these four states under the study period.5 Although crime characterizations rose and fell between 2003 and 2013,
the violent crime rate trend remained stable
from 2003 to 2008 and gradually declined between 2008 and 2013. Moreover, the largest
spike in crime characterizations in 2011 occurred despite a dip in the violent crime rate
the same year.
The crime characterization was so dominant
in our data that the second most frequent negative characterization of immigrants (that they
drain collective resources) constituted only 28
percent of all negative characterizations. A

story from Georgia typified the “drain collective resources” argument when it reported that
residents in the state “want the law to clear the
state of illegal immigrants, who they say are
taking advantage of Georgia’s schools, hospitals and workplaces, draining public funds as
they take jobs that could help the unemployed” (Schneider 2011). Only 15 percent of
articles contained the claim that immigrants
steal jobs from citizens, despite prior scholars
pointing to economic threat as a dominant
anti-­immigrant sentiment (Wilson 2001; Deckard and Browne 2016; Fryberg et al. 2012). A
news story from Raleigh, North Carolina, conveyed this argument in a 2011 story on opposition to immigration. The story quoted Ron
Woodward, president of an North Carolina–
based advocacy group called N.C. Listen, as saying, “If we had half of those people here illegally and those jobs were freed up, that’s
100,000 Americans today that would have a job
that don’t have one . . . That would be a great
improvement” (Barrett 2011). That the steal jobs
argument appears so rarely in the data is surprising given the wealth of academic and public attention to the presumed economic costs
of immigration to American-­born workers
(Newton 2000; Simon and Sikich 2007; Stuesse
2009; Wright, Levy, and Citrin 2015).
Although negative and positive characterizations appeared at similar frequencies in our

5. The trends in crime rates are not driven by a single state. In Alabama, the per capita violent crime rate remained
the same from 2003 to 2013, but in the other three states it declined over the same period.
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sample, positive characterizations and countervailing arguments about immigrants took a
variety of forms. The most common counterpoint offered did not address crime but instead
asserted that immigrants in the region face
racism and discrimination. Indeed, nearly 50
percent of stories that portrayed immigrants
positively made the case that immigrants experience racism or discrimination.6 The second most common positive argument made
about immigrants characterized noncitizens
as hard workers who contribute to the U.S.
economy. These arguments about work ethic
and economic contributions made up approximately 33 percent of all positive arguments
made about immigrants. The third most common positive argument (26 percent) identified
immigrants as contributors to the public good
or as individuals who make collective resources from which others benefit. Around 14
percent of positive claims argued that immigrants have strong family values or that immigrant children are deserving members of society. If immigration opponents attempted to
steer public discourse toward the assumed
criminality of immigrants, supporters focused
instead on racism and discrimination and on
work ethic.
To understand media trends in immigration
coverage, we also examined the countries of
origin noted for those immigrants discussed
in the mainstream newspapers. Country of origin proved an important device for writers in
framing their arguments about immigration.
A full 36 percent of news articles noted immigrants’ country or region of origin. Of these
articles, 57 percent focused on immigrants
from Mexico, an unsurprising trend given the
demographics of the newly arrived noncitizen
population in these states. No other region or
country of origin made up more than 8 percent
of the total. Because public and media discourse about immigration also relies at times
on racialized framing to make arguments about
immigrants, we also coded for the use of racial

labels in immigration-­related news coverage
(Brown 2013). Approximately 30 percent of all
articles used at least one racial descriptor in
their reporting on immigration. The most commonly used racial category was Latino-­Hispanic
(nearly 80 percent of all racial labels applied),
suggesting that Southern media discourse on
immigration is overwhelming centered on Latinos rather than other, in some cases, sizable
populations such as Asian Americans.
To assess news media depictions of Latino
and Mexican immigrants specifically, we examined the co-­occurrence of negative and positive characterization codes with country of
Mexican origin and Latino-­Hispanic race codes
(see figures 2 and 3). First, we examined the
most common negative characterizations
made in articles that discuss Mexican immigrants. Surprisingly, only 15 percent of negative
immigrant characterizations in our data set asserted that Mexicans newcomers steal jobs or
otherwise threaten the economic stability of
nonimmigrants.7 Rather than highlight the
economic effects of immigration, the most
common attacks levied against Mexican immigrants during this period characterized
these newcomers as criminals. Nearly two-­
thirds of all negative characterizations in these
stories labeled Mexican immigrants as perpetrators of crime. These stories took multiple
forms, including news reporting on individual
instances of criminal activity perpetrated by
noncitizens, groups of immigrants implicated
in gang activity and the illegal drug trade, and
undocumented immigrants as inherently criminal due to their unauthorized status. Consider
the following quote from a 2011 Augusta Chronicle story:
U.S. Attorney Ed Tarver said Wednesday that
51-­year-­old Oscar Lazo and 35-­year-­old Eva
Ramos were charged with conspiring to sell
the stolen identities of U.S. citizens and harboring illegal immigrants. Prosecutors also
charged Maurcio Cruz and Manuel Cruz—

6. Racism or discrimination claims appear at similar rates in Alabama, Mississippi, and North Carolina (around
50 to 52 percent of all positive claims and 14.1 percent to 16.6 percent of all stories) but are slightly less common
in Georgia (36 percent of all positive codes and 38 percent of all published stories).
7. By contrast, the most frequently made negative claim in stories about Middle Eastern immigrants involved
terrorism; Southeast Asian immigrants were chided for their lack of English skills.
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�t he r aci a liz at ion of l at ino immigr a n ts

127

Figure 2. Negative Characterizations of Immigrants
0.70

Mexico
Latinos or Hispanics

0.60

Total negative

Proportion

0.50
0.40
0.30
0.20
0.10

ts
ris

ob
s

Te
r

ro

St
ea
lj

us
io
re
lig
rly
ve

O

N
ot

as
s

O
ve
rly

im

fe
rt
ile

ila
tin
g

h
is
En
gl
N
o

D

ra

in

co

Cr

im

e

or

cr
im

in
al
s

D
on
't
wo
lle
rk
ct
iv
e
re
so
ur
ce
s

0.00

Source: Authors’ calculations.

Figure 3. Positive Characterizations of Immigrants
0.60

Mexico
Latinos or Hispanics

Proportion

0.50

Total positive

0.40
0.30
0.20
0.10

sm

s

ci
ra
e
Fa
c

ct

iv

e

re

so
ur

ce

wo
rk
in
g
H
ar
d

s
lu
e
va
ily
Fa
m

En
gl
is
ng
ni
ar

co

lle

Le

M

ak

e

D

es

er

As

vi
ng

si
m

ila

tin

g

ch
ild
re
n

h

0.00

Source: Authors’ calculations.

both citizens of Mexico—with using the stolen identities to get hired at the restaurant.
(Augusta Chronicle 2011)

As is typical in the data, this story not only
reports on law-­breaking activities by Mexican

immigrants, but also stresses the criminal
schemes hatched by those immigrants.
Whereas the most common negative characterization of Mexican immigrants focused on
criminal tendencies and activities, the two
most common positive characterizations em-

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�128

Immigr ation a nd Ch a nging Iden tities

phasized immigrants’ hard work and strong
work ethic (44 percent) or claimed that immigrants face racism and discrimination (46 percent).8 Although the aggregate measures show
the hard work and racism claims as equally
prevalent, time-­series analyses reveal that arguments about Mexicans’ work ethic were most
common in the earlier years of our sample, and
racism-­discrimination arguments remain consistently high. In only one year (2006), did the
hard work argument appear more frequently
than the racism or discrimination argument,
suggest that the latter argument about Mexicans was more dominant than the aggregate
numbers reveal.9
These results indicate that, since 2003, immigration discourse in Southern news media
has crystallized around two themes: the criminality of Mexican immigrants and the discriminatory treatment these immigrants face.10 But
are these discussions primarily about race or
primarily about country of origin? To answer
that question, we examined characterizations
of Latinos-­Hispanics in our dataset (see figures
2 and 3). Results reveal similar patterns. Again,
the most common negative characterization in
these articles involved crime and criminality.
More than half (53 percent) of the stories that
discussed Latinos also made assertions about
their supposed criminal tendencies. Virtually

the same proportion of stories with positive
characterizations (47 percent) argued that Latinos face ongoing racism and discrimination.
Notably, news stories were more likely to make
claims of racism and discrimination when discussing Latinos or Hispanics (52 percent) than
when discussing Mexicans specifically (46 percent). Arguments about immigrant work ethic
were also far more common in stories about
Mexicans (44 percent) than in stories about Latinos or Hispanics (34 percent). These linguistic distinctions may signal differences in an
ethnic versus a racial framing, the former intended to construct and denote population
characteristics that are cultural and more positive than the latter (Hattam 2007).11 Despite
these distinctions, these findings suggest a
deep racialization of immigration discourse in
the news media, with media coverage focused
on constructions of Latino criminality and anti-­
Latino racism.
In at least three respects, this media characterization of Latino newcomers parallels the
long-­standing associations between African
Americans and criminality (Alexander 2012;
Mendelberg 2001). First, the emphasis in our
data on Latinos as dangerous outsiders with
inherent criminal tendencies mirrors the long-­
standing characterization of African Americans
as dangerous outsiders, predators, and public

8. These same patterns hold for stories that discussed Central American immigrants. We do not report this data
because references to Central American immigrants were rare in our data set (fewer than two hundred references total or less than 5 percent of all stories).
9. These shifts do not appear to reflect increases in the employment of Latino journalists by newspapers in our
data set. Our story-­by-­story analysis suggests that only 2 percent of all stories in the dataset were written by
Latino journalists, with no increase overtime in the publication of Latino-­authored pieces.
10. Additional analyses suggest these patterns do not reflect significant differences in code distribution across
article types (news reporting, letters to the editor, and opinion pieces). The majority of crime and racism codes
appear in news stories. News stories constituted 68 percent of our total sample. Approximately 64 percent of
racism claims and 72 percent of crime claims occur in news stories. Opinion pieces, which constituted 25 percent of the sample, contained 33 percent of the racism codes and 23 percent of the crime codes. Both codes
are underrepresented in letters to the editor. A breakdown of results by state shows that these trends are not
driven by a single state. Rather, trends appear regionally.
11. Whether there is an analytic distinction between race and ethnicity is heavily debated (see Brown and Jones
2015). Here, we follow panethnicity researchers and colloquial usage in treating national-­origin labels as ethnic,
in contrast to panethnic or racial labels that homogenize diverse national origin groups (Okamoto and Mora
2014). In using the terms racial and ethnic in this fashion, we do not suggest a clear analytical distinction between
the two concepts but rather argue that the two concepts conjure different “associative chains” that produce
distinct discourses in the United States (Hattam 2007)
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�t he r aci a liz at ion of l at ino immigr a n ts

129

Figure 4. Crime and Racism Claims by Year in Mainstream Newspapers
0.25

Proportion

0.20
0.15
0.10
Crime

0.05
0.00

Racism

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

Source: Authors’ calculations.

menaces (Russell-­Brown 2008; Alexander 2012).
Second, just as assumptions of black criminality often precede any actual criminal actions
(Yancy 2016), news coverage of Latinos in our
data typically assume criminality on the basis
of a civil violation: unauthorized presence.
Third, media portrayals of African American
and Latino crime are disproportionate to the
actual levels of crime committed by those
groups (Dixon and Linz 2000a).
Our results further suggest that Latino
racialization originates not only from critics
of immigrants who characterize Latinos and
Mexicans as criminals but also from pro-­
immigration forces. Rather than make pro-­
immigrant arguments grounded in economic
or human rights claims (Bloemraad, Silva, and
Voss 2016; Deckard and Browne 2016; Fujiwara
2005; Lawlor 2015), immigration news stories
more often asserted that immigrants, Latinos
and Mexicans in particular, faced widespread
racism and discrimination. The writers, editorial board members, and political figures making these arguments routinely drew parallels
between immigration enforcement efforts and
the South’s historic commitment to racial inequality, Jim Crow, and segregation. For example, in a column focused on immigration, Sid
Salter of the Jackson Clarion-­Ledger dispelled
common myths about Latino immigrants and
argued, “Now that a measure of progress has
been made in race relations between blacks
and whites in Mississippi, it seems some

among us are encouraging new avenues for racism and bigotry, and adding a side order of misplaced nationalism” (Salter 2003). Another article in the same newspaper quoted Bill
Chandler, a Mississippi immigration advocate,
as saying, “[Anti-­L atino racism] is the same
kind of racism that has been perpetuated
against African Americans for years” (Crisp
2010).
Time-­series data show that these two racializing arguments (that of Latino criminality on
one hand and of racial discrimination on the
other) are not independent of each other. As
figure 4 shows, these arguments about racism
and discrimination rise and fall in tandem with
criminality assertions. More specifically, both
Latino criminality and racial discrimination
claims rise and then decline from 2004 to 2006.
Criminalization arguments rise again in 2007,
followed closely by a steep increase of racial
discrimination arguments the following year.
This parallel relationship continues throughout the period of analysis—declining slowly after 2007, rising again between 2010 and 2012,
and declining steeply through to 2013.
Although these claims rise and fall concurrently, our data suggest that different actors
make each argument. News stories highlighting the criminality of Mexicans and Latinos
most commonly quoted state and local government officials, whereas those focused on racism and discrimination relied most often on
reports from representatives from advocacy

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Immigr ation a nd Ch a nging Iden tities

and nonprofit organizations that serve local immigrants. Taken together, these trends suggest
an ongoing and multifaceted cycle of raciali­
zation in which elected and appointed government officials challenge Latino or Mexican
­immigrants as criminal elements, and immigration advocates respond with charges of racism and discrimination. As counterpoints to
racializing claims of Latino immigrant criminality, publishers choose to feed this racialization by citing claims of Latino-­targeted racism
and discrimination. Although these two discourses have different implications and goals,
both are “racial projects” that construct, emphasize, and give primacy to racial distinctions
between Latinos and other groups (Omi and
Winant 1994).
A fr ica n A m e r ic a n N e w s pa p e r s

Do the same patterns present in African American newspapers in the region? To answer this
question, we turn to results from our content
analysis of immigration-­related stories published in four African American newspapers.
Slightly different patterns are evident. First, although positive and negative characterizations
of immigrants appeared at the relatively same
frequency in the mainstream newspapers (31
percent and 29 percent, respectively), African
American newspapers portrayed immigrants
in strikingly more positive terms. African American newspapers published more than twice as
many positive characterizations of immigrants
than negative. Approximately 15 percent of stories in the database contained at least one negative characterization versus 33 percent containing positive characterizations. Although
the balance of positive and negative characterizations differed from the mainstream press,
the content of immigration characterizations
was quite similar.
As in the mainstream press, the most common negative characterization of immigrants
was the argument that immigrants perpetuate
crime. Negative arguments made up only 15
percent of the total stories, but nearly 60 percent of the negative arguments about im­
migrants in African American newspapers
­involved judgments about immigrants’ involvement in criminal activities or their criminal dispositions. For instance, the Birmingham Times

published a story in 2010 that reported on
the criminal dealings of local Mexican immigrants:
A federal grand jury today indicted two undocumented aliens for providing counterfeit
identification documents, announced U.S.
Attorney Joyce White Vance and Bureau of
Immigration and Customs Enforcement Resident Agent in Charge Jesse Blakeman. The
indictment filed in U.S. District Court charges
Adalberto de la Cruz-­Angeles, 42, a Mexican
citizen, with two counts of transferring counterfeit Social Security and Permanent Resident cards, once in July and once in November. (Birmingham Times 2010)

Although the African American papers focused on the supposed criminal tendencies and
behaviors of immigrants, they differed from the
mainstream papers in their secondary focus on
immigrants as an economic burden. The claim
that immigrants steal jobs appeared in approximately 39 percent of the articles that negatively
characterized immigrants. Assertions that immigrants drain collective resources appeared
in 21 percent. These articles typically asserted
that immigrants drained public coffers by virtue of their overrepresentation in local prisons,
their mental and physical health issues, and
their reliance on various welfare programs.
These claims echo popular arguments that African Americans see immigrants, particularly
Latinos, as their direct competition for resources and employment (McClain et al. 2006).
Rather than appearing as a dominant narrative
in the African American press, however, these
arguments represented only a small proportion
of the total articles in the newspapers under
study. The economic threat claims were also
concentrated in the early years of our sample,
peaking in 2006 and tapering off by 2008 (see
figure 5).
Despite commonly made claims about conflict between Latinos and African Americans,
our results reveal that positive characterizations of immigrants, Latinos in particular, far
outpaced negative ones in the African American
press. Consider the following excerpt from the
Atlanta Daily World in 2006. The author of the
article included a quote from a nationally re-

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�t he r aci a liz at ion of l at ino immigr a n ts

131

Figure 5. Steal Jobs Claims by Year in African American Newspapers
0.35
0.30
Proportion

0.25
0.20
0.15
0.10
0.05
0.00

2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Source: Authors’ calculations.

nowned Latino advocacy group to advocate for
humane immigrant policies: “Undocumented
immigrants contribute about $850 billion more
per year than they cost—a huge net gain for the
United States,” said Brent Wilkes, national executive director of the League of United Latin
American Citzens. “It’s about time that we provide a legal avenue for them to come here in
recognition of their tremendous contributions
to our country” (Curry 2006). The article not
only emphasized the positive economic contributions of immigrants, it also advocated for
policies that would facilitate authorized immigration to the United States.
Although such arguments were common
in African American papers, by far the most
common defense of immigrants offered in the
African American newspapers asserted that immigrants face discrimination or racism. Racism-­
discrimination claims constituted approximately 50 percent of all positive immigrant
characterizations in the mainstream papers and
higher than 70 percent in African American papers. An article from the Jackson Advocate illustrates these claims in its discussion of law enforcement and motorists. Quoting a local
immigrant advocate, the article argued, “The
past reports of ‘driving while black’ have been
supplemented with accounts today of ‘driving
while brown’. . . with the new focus being on
Latino immigrants” (Vern 2010). This quote illustrates not only the common trend in black
papers to argue that immigrants face racism
but also the parallel trend of equating black-­
targeted discrimination with discrimination

targeting Latino immigrants. So common were
references to racism and discrimination in this
dataset that these claims dwarfed other two
most commonly occurring positive characterizations: of immigrants as hard workers (22 percent) and of immigrants as contributing to the
public good (17 percent). As in the mainstream
press, racism and crime claims rise and fall in
tandem over the study period, spiking concurrently in 2006, 2010, and 2013 (see figure 6).
Results from the African American newspapers also reveal distinct trends in the racial labels used in immigration-­related news stories,
particularly when compared to the mainstream
press. Whereas 30 percent of mainstream newspaper articles used at least one racial descriptor
in their coverage of immigration, 67 percent of
articles from African American newspapers
used at least one racial descriptor. The most
commonly used racial category was African
American–black (87 percent), followed by
Latino-­Hispanic (nearly 54 percent of all racial
labels applied versus 80 percent in mainstream
newspapers). These findings suggest that
though immigration coverage focuses on Latinos in both venues, African American newspapers are far more likely than mainstream newspapers to also discuss immigration as it affects
or connects to African American communities.
To assess African American press descriptions of Latino immigrants, we examined the
application of negative and positive characterizations of Latino immigrants. Characterizations of immigrants as criminal were the majority (73 percent) of negative characterizations,

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�Immigr ation a nd Ch a nging Iden tities

132

Figure 6. Racism and Crime Claims by Year in African American Newspapers
0.45

Racism

0.40

Crime

0.35
Proportion

0.30
0.25
0.20
0.15
0.10
0.05
0.00

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

Source: Authors’ calculations.

followed distantly by the claim that Latino immigrants drain collective resources (27 percent).
These patterns indicate that the dual racialization of Latinos as criminals and as victims
of racism and discrimination appears in the
African American as well as the mainstream
press. The same time-­series patterns from the
mainstream press also arise in African American newspapers. Like in the mainstream press,
the racialized arguments about Latino criminality and anti-­Latino racism rise and fall in
tandem, again suggesting a pattern in which
immigration foes attack Latinos on the basis
of perceived criminal tendencies and advocates
respond with targeted claims of Latino immigrants facing racism and discrimination. The
key difference between the mainstream and African American newspapers involves the prevalence of each argument and the timing of shifts
in each argument. In the mainstream newspapers, criminality claims occur more frequently
than racism claims in all but one year of the
dataset (2012).12 And, as noted, in the African
American press, racism arguments surpass
criminality arguments in 2008 and remain

more frequent through the end of our analysis
period. Coupled with the fact that the African
American press offered more positive than negative characterizations of immigrants than did
the mainstream press, these trends may evidence broader shifts in black-­Latino relations
in the South over the last decade and a half. As
figure 7 makes clear, over the period of study,
articles about Latinos became less likely to invoke negative characterizations of immigrants
over time. The opposite pattern holds for positive portrayals, trending broadly upward after
2005. These patterns are specific to the African
American newspapers. Mainstream newspaper
articles about Latinos show slight declines in
both positive and negative characterizations of
immigrants during the study period. Time-­
series data indicates that characterizations of
immigrants as criminal, followed by stealing
jobs, diminish over time, and are less prominent than in the mainstream press, suggesting
a shift in public discourse about black-­Latino
relations over the last decade and a half, characterized by increasingly positive characterizations of Latino immigrants as they increased
in size and visibility across the region.13

12. This year marked widespread state and national-­level attention to anti-­immigration laws such as Alabama’s
HB56. Critics of these bills regularly cited them as evidence of racism and discrimination targeted at immigrants
(Brown, Jones, and Dow 2016; Campbell 2016; Mohl 2016).
13. In the last years of our data, crime and racism claims also follow different patterns in the two data sets, both
claims trending upward in the African American press and downward in the mainstream press. Our close read
of the stories from these years does not suggest that these shifts were event driven.
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�t he r aci a liz at ion of l at ino immigr a n ts

133

Figure 7. Co-occurrence of Positive and Negative Claims and Latino or Hispanic by Year in African
American Newspapers
0.35

Negative
Positive

0.30

Proportion

0.25
0.20
0.15
0.10
0.05
0.00

2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Source: Authors’ calculations.

Di s c u s s i o n a n d C o n c lu s i o n

In both the mainstream press and African
American press, results indicate that since 2003
immigration discourse in Southern news media has crystallized around two themes: the
criminality of Latino immigrants and the discriminatory treatment these immigrants face.
Across both sets of newspapers, negative arguments about Latinos focus on their perceived
criminal tendencies rather than characterizing
immigrants as labor market competitors or
economic threats. These claims arise in stories
reporting disproportionately on Latinos under
investigation for possible criminal offenses,
suggesting the prominence of a racial threat
narrative centered on public safety. These same
characterizations also appear in news coverage
about gang activity and in stories claiming that
undocumented Latinos are criminals, by virtue
of nothing more than their mere presence in
the United States. Paralleling this criminality
argument is the equally common claim that Latinos face mounting racism and discrimination
akin to that African Americans face. That these
trends are particularly pronounced for stories
about Latinos and Hispanics (versus stories
about Mexicans) further illustrates the racializing effects of these narratives. These trends
appeared in both the mainstream and the African American press, with one important difference. Pieces in the African American press
were far more positive toward immigrants rel-

ative to the mainstream press. These findings
cast doubt on claims that Latinos in the region
are assimilating into whiteness or occupying
an elevated position in the racial hierarchy.
Our findings indicate key similarities between the racialization of Latinos and that of
African Americans. The criminality claims that
appear in our data are similar to patterns of
media-­driven racialization of African Americans in at least three respects: they emphasize
Latinos as dangerous outsiders, assume inherent criminal tendencies among Latinos, and
overrepresent the proportion of crimes committed by this demographic group (Alexander
2012; Mendelberg 2001; Dixon and Linz 2000a).
The central difference between constructions
of black criminality and of Latino criminality
in our data is the emphasis on Latino illegality
as evidence of criminality. There is, to our
knowledge, no corresponding narrative about
black illegality in the media; however, definitions of criminal and illegal are elastic (Gilroy
2008). Unauthorized presence in the United
States is not a criminal violation but rather an
administrative one. The assumption that unauthorized presence is somehow criminal is a
social construction, and historical immigration
debates in the United States have not always
equated unauthorized presence with criminality (Ngai 2005). A key finding from our study is
that the news media in our sample choose to
portray illegality as reflective of criminality ten-

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Immigr ation a nd Ch a nging Iden tities

dencies inherent to Latino immigrants rather
opting to portray illegal presence as an administrative, human rights, or legal-­bureaucratic
issue. This choice is similar to constructions
of black criminality that have long been used
to demonize African Americans as unfit for legal, social, and other forms of citizenship
(James 2010). In our data, the constructions of
Latino illegality as criminality do the same
work.
Our findings not only indicate similarities
in the racialization of African Americans and
Latinos, they also suggest that black political
leaders and cultural elites perceive Latinos as
sharing a common experience of racial discrimination at the hands of whites. The pronounced
emphasis on anti-­Latino discrimination in the
African American press may be coincidental,
but taken alongside new work on black-­Latino
alliances (Brown, Jones, and Dow 2016) and
shifts in black elite public opinion (Williams
and Hannon 2016) it may also reflect a strategic
choice to shore up a sense of shared minority
status between African Americans and Latinos.
Although characterizations of Latinos as victims of discrimination and racism may spur
alliances between minority groups, such claims
may also feed a sense of racial threat among
whites by emphasizing the challenges of Latino
immigration to existing resource distributions.
Regardless of the intent and consequences,
these patterns indicate that media-­driven racialization occurs through both negative characterizations of specific racial groups and
through positive defensive pro-­immigrant
claims. As a counterpoint to the heightened racialization of Latinos as criminals, newspaper
editors and journalists choose to publish stories that defend immigrants as the targets of
racism and discrimination. In the latter instance, racialization may serve as a defensive
resource, in which advocacy efforts draw on
histories of civil rights activism to make their
case. These results suggest that to make sense
of the racially transformative effects of immigration requires a nuanced understanding of
the racialization process. Existing research
largely emphasizes explicit patterns of immigrant racial self-­identification and state ascription. This focus neglects the effects that pro-­
immigration forces, meso-­level organizations,

and implicit racial appeals have on immigrants’
place in and adjustment to U.S. racial hierarchies.
Although our use of the term racialization
refers to discursive constructions, these discourses are meaningful in a racialized social
system, characterized by systemic inequalities
and the primacy of racial hierarchies and divisions (Bonilla-­Silva 1997). As a result, these racialized appeals likely have important consequences for immigrant-­native relations. Efforts
to frame immigrants positively as racialized
minorities and victims of discrimination serve
different purposes and may even serve different purposes for different groups. In the case
of nonwhites, the framing of Latino immigrants as racialized minorities and targets of
discrimination may spur interminority sympathies and intergroup coalitions, particularly in
the U.S. South, where civil rights organizations
and language have unique political visibility.
Collaborative efforts by civil rights organizations, immigrant rights organizations, and African American representatives to pass sanctuary city ordinances in Jackson, Mississippi, and
Birmingham, Alabama, may be evidence of
such effects. Such efforts may also stimulate a
sense of threat among whites (see also Schildkraut and Marotta 2018; Craig and Richeson
2018) and may yield renewed local and state
immigration enforcement.
Because these results are regional rather
than constitutive of a single case, they have significant implications for the context of reception facing new immigrants. In using normative racial codes to situate Latino immigrants
in relation to existing groups (Padín 2005), media not only discursively situate Latinos as most
similar to blacks but also shape the patterns by
which community and local level bureaucrats
will extend access to services and social resources on the one hand, or engage in punitive
behaviors on the other. In establishing the parameters by which Latinos are situated and understood in Southern communities, media discourses may play a significant role in shaping
mobility opportunities for Latinos. A lingering
question from this study involves the discursive
tropes used by the Spanish-­language press to
characterize Latino immigrants in the region.
Given our interest in ascriptive processes of ra-

r sf: t he russell sage f ou n dat ion jou r na l of t he so ci a l sciences

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�t he r aci a liz at ion of l at ino immigr a n ts

cialization, this article focuses only on English-­
language sources. Further, at the time of our
analysis and writing, Spanish-­language media
in the South was unavailable in digitized news
databases. Future analyses of Spanish-­language
media in the region would provide a more detailed analysis of shifts in Latino racial identity,
racialization, and incorporation during this period.
Media racialization of Latinos may affect Latino identities, producing new in-­group meanings, boundaries, and political mobilization. A
sense of proximity to blackness may play a significant role in shoring up a sense of Latino
identity (Jones 2012; Sanchez 2008). This shared
sense of group position can serve as a basis for
political coalitions with long-­term implications
(Kaufmann 2003). Still, our results may reflect
racialization processes particular to the South.
Indeed, the often contradictory conclusions
about the location of Latinos in the U.S. racial
hierarchy may reflect regional differences in
racialization and racial hierarchies. Greater attention to place-­based variation in immigrant
racialization will illuminate the mechanisms
of Latino racialization across contexts.

135

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              <text>The Racialization of Latino Immigrants in New Destinations: Criminality, Ascription, and Countermobilization</text>
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              <text>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.</text>
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