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Journal ArticleDOI

Politicized Places: Explaining Where and When Immigrants Provoke Local Opposition

Daniel J. Hopkins
- 01 Feb 2010 - 
- Vol. 104, Iss: 01, pp 40-60
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TLDR
This article developed the politicized places hypothesis, an alternative that focuses on how national and local conditions interact to construe immigrants as threatening, and tested the hypothesis using new data on local anti-immigrant policies.
Abstract
In ethnic and racial terms, America is growing rapidly more diverse. Yet attempts to extend racial threat hypotheses to today's immigrants have generated inconsistent results. This article develops the politicized places hypothesis, an alternative that focuses on how national and local conditions interact to construe immigrants as threatening. Hostile political reactions to neighboring immigrants are most likely when communities undergo sudden influxes of immigrants and when salient national rhetoric reinforces the threat. Data from several sources, including twelve geocoded surveys from 1992 to 2009, provide consistent support for this approach. Time-series cross-sectional and panel data allow the analysis to exploit exogenous shifts in salient national issues such as the September 11 attacks, reducing the problem of residential self-selection and other threats to validity. The article also tests the hypothesis using new data on local anti-immigrant policies. By highlighting the interaction of local and national conditions, the politicized places hypothesis can explain both individual attitudes and local political outcomes.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Using Internet Search Data to Produce State-level Measures The Case of Tea Party Mobilization

TL;DR: Drawing on existing studies of the Tea Party movement and theories of right-wing and conservative mobilization, state-level Google search measures for anti-immigrant sentiment and economic distress are developed and compared to traditional metrics that are typically used to measure these concepts.
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Securing Communities or Profits? The Effect of Federal-Local Partnerships on Immigration Enforcement

TL;DR: The authors used zero-inflated negative binomial regression to assess county-level deportations resulting from local participation in the Secure Communities program and found that existing financial and structural resources as well as financial incentives are strong determinants of county deportation levels.
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Political Trust and Support for Immigration in the American Mass Public

TL;DR: The authors show that political trust exerts a positive and substantively meaningful influence on Americans' support for immigration, and that politically trustful individuals, both Democrats and Republicans, are more supportive of pro-immigration policies.
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How Contact Experiences Shape Welcoming: Perspectives from U.S.-Born and Immigrant Groups:

TL;DR: This paper examined how intergroup contact experiences, including both their frequency and their qualities (friendly, discriminatory) predict indicators of welcoming among U.S.-born and immigrant immigrants in the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

WHO "THEY" ARE MATTERS: Immigrant Stereotypes and Assessments of the Impact of Immigration

TL;DR: This paper investigated the relationship between stereotypes of immigrants and assessments of the impact of immigration on U.S. society and found that associations between impact assessments and stereotypes of Middle Eastern, Asian, and European immigrants are weak and fully attenuated by control covariates.
References
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