Pandemic Politics: Immigration, Framing, and Covid-19

Q1 Social Sciences
Justin Reedy, Benjamin Gonzalez O’Brien, Elizabeth H. Hurst
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract The covid-19 pandemic has revived a longstanding, and understudied, trope in American politics: the association of immigrants with disease. There has been a great deal of scholarship on the economic, cultural, and criminal threat frames attached to immigrant groups in media coverage, but little to date has specifically examined how national and local sources have framed covid-19 in the context of immigrant communities. In this paper we analyze the prevalence of two different framings of the pandemic in national and local online news outlets over the first year of the pandemic: immigration as a public health threat to the nation, and covid-19 as a threat to immigrant communities within the nation. We find significant differences between national and local coverage, with the former more likely to frame immigration as a covid-19 threat, while local news outlets were more likely to discuss the threat the virus posed to already marginalized immigrant communities.
流行病政治:移民、框架和Covid-19
2019冠状病毒病大流行使美国政治中一个长期存在但未得到充分研究的比喻重新复活:移民与疾病的联系。关于媒体报道中移民群体的经济、文化和犯罪威胁框架,已有大量学术研究,但迄今为止,很少有人专门研究国家和地方来源如何在移民社区的背景下构建covid-19。在本文中,我们分析了大流行第一年在国家和地方在线新闻媒体上流行的两种不同的大流行框架:移民对国家的公共卫生威胁,以及covid-19对国内移民社区的威胁。我们发现国家和地方报道之间存在显著差异,前者更有可能将移民视为covid-19威胁,而地方新闻媒体更有可能讨论该病毒对已经边缘化的移民社区构成的威胁。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics
Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics Social Sciences-Anthropology
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
35
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