8:40 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Media · 3 Comments
31 Mar 2006
When you hear the word “Alien”, do you think little green men from mars or do you think of Mexicans and other Latinos? According to the National Association of Hispanic Journalist (NAHJ), the language being used in the mainstream media to detail the current immigration debate dehumanizes and stereotypes. NAHJ, a 2,300-member organization of reporters, editors and other journalists, is calling the mainstream media out on their use of language and the impact it has in framing the immigration. The NAHJ is giving a historical context for the words being used in the media and offering alternative word choices. Their Resource Guide for Journalists states for example :
While Webster’s first definition of the term “alien” is in accordance with the government’s interpretation, the dictionary also includes other, darker, meanings for the word, such as “a non-terrestrial being,” “strange,” “not belonging to one,” “adverse,” “hostile.” And the Encyclopedia Britannica points out that “in early times, the tendency was to look upon the alien as an enemy and to treat him as a criminal or an outlaw.” It is not surprising then that in 1798, in anticipation of a possible war with France, the U.S. Congress passed the Alien and Sedition Acts, which restricted “aliens” and curtailed press freedoms. By 1800 the laws had been repealed or had expired but they still cast a negative shadow over the word. In modern times, with science-fiction growing in popularity, “alien” has come to mean a creature from outer space, and is considered pejorative by most immigrants.
Via / NAHJ
3:25 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Blogs|Immigration|Movies|New York City · 1 Comment
21 Mar 2006
My friend Oso pointed me in the direction of a very intriguing documentary project being developed in the Bronx which proposes to explore how using social mediums such as blogs affects the lives of new immigrants:
What happens when immigrants in the Bronx start blogging? Can social media help people communicate better with friends and family back home? Can it help communities sustain themselves? The Bronx Blog Project is a multimedia documentary about community, immigration, homesickness, and technology. Focusing on the experiences of a handful of ESL students and utilizing video and the Internet, the project documents the effects of new communication technologies on people looking for better, cheaper ways to communicate to friends and family both in the United States and their home countries, and wishing to develop and maintain new communities in the U.S.
4:49 pm By Maegan La Mala · Health|society · 2 Comments
16 Dec 2005
A new study finds that drinking rates in female immigrants increase as they acculturate to the dominate culture here in the United States.
“The study found that Latina women who are highly acculturated to American society — that is, women who tend to speak English more than Spanish, associated heavily with Anglos, and feel comfortable in relationships with Anglos — tend to drink more than those who are not so highly acculturated. Specifically, these women are more likely to drink, and tend to drink more if they do drink,” researcher Sarah E. Zemore, associate scientist at the Alcohol Research Group, said in a prepared statement.
It seems that immigrant groups change in order to accommodate to the norms present in the country. For example, in the U.S. it is acceptable for women to drink alcohol, while that may be frowned upon in the home countries of some immigrants. I am curious if this could lead to more problems with alcoholism in Latina women or if it is even an issue.
Via / Health Day
1:05 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration|midwest|Money · Comments Off
8 Dec 2005
The story is from the Chicago area. It’s hard to believe in this day and age stuff like this still happens:
A growing list of customers of U.S. Bank in Highwood, most of them Mexican immigrants who speak little English, say their savings and other accounts are missing or have been depleted without their permission…
“It’s sad,” Garrett said. “Many of these residents don’t trust anybody. They feel they might be deported.”
The allegations come as banks have been trying to build trust among immigrant populations, which the industry sees as an untapped customer base, experts say.
6:34 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration|mexico|society · 2 Comments
6 Dec 2005
Contrary to the old racist wives tale of “They can’t find a job in their country so they come here to take ours”, the Pew Hispanic Center has released a report which points to factors other than unemployment as catalysts for immigration northward:
The vast majority of undocumented migrants from Mexico were gainfully employed before they left for the United States, according to a Pew Hispanic Center report released today. The report suggests that failure to find work at home does not seem to be the primary reason that the estimated 6.3 million undocumented migrants from Mexico have
come to the U.S.
4:04 pm By Maegan La Mala · Activism|Immigration · Comments Off
24 Nov 2005
The Border Film Project is very interesting project that hopes to raise awareness about the issues related to the border through images.
The purpose of the project is to capture the perspective of both immigrants coming to the United States and minuteman at the border attempting to stop them. Both groups are given disposable cameras to take pictures of their journey or their experience and they are asked to send them back to the Border Film Project.
Both sets of photographers have the power to show everyday Americans what they otherwise cannot see, providing a more personal look into a rich and complicated issue.
The project is run by Boston College grads Brett Huneycutt and Victoria Criado, and University of Arizona grad Rudy Adler.
At the conclusion of the project the various images will be shown in galleries in Mexico and the United States.
Via / Border Film Project
Immigrants make people nervous, especially after the fires of Paris. You would think that other European countries would take France’s example of police abuse and its consequences to heart when dealing with young immigrants and their children struggling to make ends meet. But no, it seems much easier for Spain to revert to the tried and true ways of using the
strategy for tackling the gangs that involves more rigorous policing of areas where members meet. Spain will expel gang members if prosecutors can prove they’re violent
There is a concern in Spain that Latino gangs ” may have committed three murders this year”. That big maybe is enough to link crimes to young people that are calling themselves the “Latin Kings” after the black and gold clad street organization that began in the prisons of the Midwest and moved across the United States.
Looking at how the anti-gang strategies led by police and federal agencies in the United States have failed to solve the problems of inner city youth of color and how the heavy handed policies of France also failed, why doesn’t Spain try a different approach?
Via / Hispanic Tips and Bloomberg.com
They are not Latinos like us, but they are the children of immigrants like many of us. They are the young people in France setting cars ablaze. They have moved from targeting just their own neighborhoods, their versions of ghettos and projects, and now are in the tourist areas and the “white” areas. That is making the government crack down and the world take notice.
So why should Latinos care that unemployment is higher among the immigrant community in France than anywhere else in that country? Why should we care that the youth are raging in the streets because there is no place else for them to be? Author Ana Castillo wrote two days ago in her blog about a time when she went to France and she was stopped by security and mistaken for the housekeeper in the home of her host. She was a Mexican here in the United States. In France she was viewed as a possible Algerian, a non-white person, a person who came to the country to work the jobs that White French people would not do. Sound familiar? It is the same story for immigrants all over the world. What is happening in France is what happens when the children of immigrants are not given the same space and access as others, when despite being born in a country they are treated like outsiders still. France’s story is our own and should serve as a warning of what happens when you allow a third world within a first world.
Via / Ana Castillo.com
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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