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In 2006, massive protests drew well over 1 millionundocumented immigrants and their supporters to thestreets of major U.S. cities. But a year later,there was still no comprehensive immigration reform,only a public opinion backlash and an unfunded billto build a fence along the U.S.-Mexico border. Wereprotesters adopting the wrong strategy by hyping uptheir cause?In an attempt to answer this question, more than2,000 immigration bills introduced in the U.S. Houseand Senate from 1980 to 2005 were gauged against thelevel of media attention paid to immigration topicsin the given years. Three…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In 2006, massive protests drew well over 1 millionundocumented immigrants and their supporters to thestreets of major U.S. cities. But a year later,there was still no comprehensive immigration reform,only a public opinion backlash and an unfunded billto build a fence along the U.S.-Mexico border. Wereprotesters adopting the wrong strategy by hyping uptheir cause?In an attempt to answer this question, more than2,000 immigration bills introduced in the U.S. Houseand Senate from 1980 to 2005 were gauged against thelevel of media attention paid to immigration topicsin the given years. Three hypotheses were tested -that immigration bills were more symbolic duringyears of high hype, that they were more anti-immigrant in years of high hype and that legislatorsfrom districts along the U.S.-Mexico border weregenerally less likely to draft symbolic, anti-immigrant bills than their non-border counterparts,regardless of hype.In results represented visually by graphics, highlysymbolic bills such as resolutions followed thehighs and lows of hype. Anti-immigrant bills,such as those focusing on alien criminals andterrorists, followed even closer.
Autorenporträt
Gilot Marie§Marie Gilot emigrated to the United States from her native France at the age of 19. She has a master's degree in political science from the University of Texas at El Paso, a city in which she worked as a newspaper reporter. She is currently studying at Princeton University.