Writing Immigration: Scholars and Journalists in Dialogue
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Writing Immigration - Marcelo Suarez-Orozco
Introduction
ROBERTO SURO
Over three decades ago a congressionally mandated commission on immigration proposed a sweeping overhaul of laws, policies, and procedures. The core recommendation, as summarized by the chairman, the Reverend Theodore M. Hesburgh, then president of the University of Notre Dame, was to close the back door
of illegal migration so as to keep the front door
open to a reasonable number of legal arrivals.¹ If that sounds familiar, even hauntingly contemporary, it should. Hesburgh’s seemingly simple formulation has enjoyed an exceptional shelf life. Repeated time and again by politicians, advocates, and commentators, including a number of the authors in this book, this prescription has been at the heart of immigration policy debates for three decades. Nonetheless, the objective of a back door shut tight and a well-regulated front door seems as unattainable today as when Hesburgh offered it up.
Even by contemporary Washington, D.C., standards of gridlock, immigration has a remarkable track record of failure in policy creation. We have had lengthy, full-blown, multiyear congressional debates in the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s, and the jockeying has begun for another round in this decade, although much of the action is spreading to state capitals and the courts. All the while we have been kicking around many of the same policy mechanisms suggested by the Hesburgh commission. These include tougher enforcement at the border and worksites, a legalization program for the current population of unauthorized migrants, and better mechanisms to ensure that legal flows satisfy the nation’s economic, social, and foreign policy needs.
Given how much American politics has changed and how much the phenomenon of immigration has changed over the past thirty years, it seems reasonable to look broadly for the causes of stalemate and stasis. Rereading the Hesburgh commission report offers a clue, pointing to another unaccomplished agenda. Back in the late 1970s, the commission conducted an extensive review of the existing research, heard testimony from leading scholars, and ordered its own studies. Despite this considerable effort—arguably more systematic and extensive than any conducted since—the commission found worrisome knowledge gaps. Regardless of some accepted findings on the characteristics of unauthorized migration, the commission stated that the literature on this subject is inconclusive
and concluded that there is almost no consensus regarding the impact of illegal immigration on U.S. society.
²
The commission found uncertainty or unresolved contention on such key matters as the impact on social services, job displacement, and wage depression. Would a similar effort today find greater certainty, given that the literature is now vastly larger and more sophisticated? Disturbingly, the commission came to an assessment of public opinion that seems also depressingly familiar: on the most pressing
issue, that of unauthorized migration, current policy and law enforcement efforts have been criticized from all sides.
³ Hesburgh worried that Americans would lose sight of the advantages of a well-regulated immigration system because they felt the system itself was out of control.
⁴ He was reflecting on the aftermath of the Mariel boatlift of 1980, when more than 125,000 Cubans arrived in southern Florida from Port of Mariel, Cuba, but the sentiment is often heard today even in the absence of a big attention-grabbing event.
Over the course of the past thirty years, a great deal has changed of course. Most notably, immigration has become a much more important factor in the life of the nation. In 1980 the foreign-born population comprised about 6 percent of the U.S. population, which was close to a historical low, and its share has more than doubled, to nearly 13 percent, which is approaching a historical high (see figure 2). In retrospect, we now know that the Hesburgh commission was witnessing the early stages of a vast, and in some ways unprecedented, era of immigration. Yet, I would argue, our policy structures have never adapted, key aspects of the intellectual agenda remain unfulfilled, and the issue of immigration repeatedly emerges as a source of contention, dissatisfaction, and anxiety for many Americans, sometimes a majority.
FIGURE 2. Foreign-born population, 1860–2009, number and share of total U.S. population. Source: United States Census.
On the one hand, we have an epochal social, economic, and demographic event, an event that is transforming the nation. On the other hand, we have a long, unhappy stalemate over how American government and society should address this event, a stalemate that has grown more pronounced and more bitter as time has passed. Scholars and journalists cannot avoid some responsibility for the unhappy outcome. Because they are important interlocutors in the national immigration debate, it is important to ask how they may have contributed to both the policy failure and the popular malaise that ensues. To engage in this exercise, one need not argue that these professions should act as advocates for specific policy outcomes nor even that they are obliged to promote consensus. However, both the press and the academy have missions in this democracy—among other things, to improve self- governance by informing and educating the public.
Both the scholarly and journalistic domains receive benefits from the public for performing those missions, whether in the form of material support or intellectual license. Stalemate is a form of failure in self- governance. There have been many costs to this stalemate, starting with the lost opportunities to have thought more deliberately about the size and character of immigration flows, to have planned better for the successful integration of immigrants and their children, and most of all to have avoided, or at least minimized, the presence of a large, semipermanent but subordinate class of residents living outside our civic sphere.
Just as there have been many costs, there have been many causes leading to the current state. We are not claiming that either the press or the academy exercises a controlling influence over government or society. We are not trying to draw lines of causality here; we don’t need to set the bar so high. Other actors have surely exercised much greater sway over the outcomes. But both the news media and the academy help to shape perceptions among both the public and the policy makers. They present chronicles and analyses. They pose conceptual frameworks and present cues about the relative importance of contemporary events. Even if that is all they do—help to shape perceptions—then they have helped produce the immigration stalemate. Understanding the roles played by journalism and scholarship will help us understand how the stalemate developed.
This inquiry can also help us understand the professions themselves. The depictions of immigration by the academy and the news media reflect deeply entrenched intellectual mind-sets, well-established methods of inquiry, and old professional norms. Immigration is a particularly useful topic in the study of journalism because the current wave of immigration and accompanying policy debate coincide with a period of profound change in both the technology and business of communications. Finally, this kind of inquiry can help set the stage for an understanding of how journalism and scholarship relate to each other, reflecting initially on how their depictions of immigration compare and eventually moving toward an examination of how they relate to each other. That understanding might prompt new agendas in both fields that aim for a more mutually beneficial interaction between them. This book and the discussions among the authors that it reflects are important first steps in that direction.
My own exploration of this topic has focused far more on journalism than on the academy. In 2008, just weeks before the authors convened in Cambridge, Massachusetts, my monograph The Triumph of No: How the Media Influence the Immigration Debate was published by the Brookings Institution and the Norman Lear Center at the University of Southern California. That effort was based on various forms of content analysis conducted by several researchers examining more than eighty thousand news stories or commentaries from print, broadcast, and digital media dating back to 1980, and I have subsequently returned to and updated the research.⁵ This quantitative work assessed both the pace of coverage by a variety of news organizations and the primary focus of that coverage across long periods of time. In addition, coverage of specific episodes by individual news organizations was analyzed in detail. The project also involved a separate analysis by the Project for Excellence in Journalism that focused on coverage across all news platforms in 2007, the year of the last major congressional debate on immigration policy. I readily confess that my views on academic depictions of immigration are more impressionistic and are not based on a systematic effort to collect and analyze data. And, while I am making confessions, I’ll also readily admit that I am guilty of every practice cited here, having written about immigration for some thirty-five years first as a journalist and more recently as a policy analyst and academic researcher.
• • •
If I had to pick one episode that epitomizes the way immigration has been portrayed by the American news media, I would have to say it is the saga of little Elian Gonzalez. Rescued off the coast of Florida in November 1999, the six-year-old Cuban boy who had lost his mother at sea, became the object of a seven-month-long soap opera as his Miami relatives and his Cuban father contested his custody. Throughout 2000 the Elian saga accounted for more than half of all immigration coverage in the New York Times, nearly two-thirds of the coverage on the CBS Evening News, and similarly astounding shares in the reports of many other news organizations. That year also happened to mark the largest single influx of immigrants to the United States in the current era of migration and perhaps the largest in American history: about 1.5 million people born abroad joined the U.S. population in 2000, according to the best available estimates.⁶
For more than four decades now, the great migration of the contemporary era has proceeded overwhelmingly through legal and orderly channels. That fact has often been overlooked in the news coverage while the attention has focused on the outliers like Elian and illegal crossers on the Rio Grande. Moreover, that great migration responded very directly to the needs of the U.S. labor market and was a component of an exceptional period of economic growth, increasing productivity, and generally rising incomes. This story too has been largely ignored by the news media. Finally, the great migration changed the nation’s demographic destiny, but that fact only drew recognition in the media after the transformation was largely set in place.
By contrast, the Elian saga had no lasting impact on the nation, at least directly.⁷ The stories about Elian were accurate enough individually; that is not the issue here. It is easy to understand why the saga was so compelling to journalists and audiences alike, loaded as it was with drama, suspense, wacky characters, and colorful locales. But while the media and the public obsessed over an irresistible family drama, they were missing the much larger, much less dramatic story that made history and whose consequences are still playing out. Even more is at stake, though. In the larger story of immigration, the Elian saga was exemplary of neither specific significant events nor public policy issues; it was far more an exception than the rule. So the extraordinary attention focused on the Elian story created not only a distraction but also a distortion. Consumed by coverage of this uniquely weird little story, audiences could come away with very mistaken impressions about the enormous migration that was reaching a historic peak.
Although there has never been another story quite like Elian’s, it is a narrative that has been told and retold for decades. It is a narrative that emerges out of crisis and confrontation rather than everyday life. It is a narrative haunted by failures to obey and enforce laws. It is the narrative that has dominated the news media’s coverage of immigration over the course of three decades, which has conditioned the American public to associate immigration with chaos, controversy, and criminality. This narrative was authored originally by America’s mainstream media decades ago—not the shrill voices of advocacy that have taken up the storyline in recent years. My content analysis of coverage from 1980 to 2010 examined the work of national and regional newspapers, public broadcasting, the Associated Press, and the evening news television broadcasts. As described in more detail throughout this introduction, the narrative of illegality drew far more attention than the less controversial aspects of the migration story in every case.
Many of my former colleagues in the news business, including friends who are contributors to this book, insist that the narrative of illegality has been unavoidable given journalism’s mission to highlight the unusual rather than to chronicle the routine. People arriving in the United States legally from abroad and successfully starting new lives do not fit the traditional definition of news, the argument goes. Meanwhile, law breaking and everything that goes with it fits naturally into the rubrics of journalism. I can accept that explanation. I can also regret it. The fact that the narrative of illegality arises from epistemological structures and professional imperatives so old that they are rarely questioned only makes the situation more grave, not less, in my view.
The current era of immigration coincides with a period of profound changes in American journalism; changes in the technology that delivers the news, in business structures, in audiences, and in some key professional norms. Among the developments has been the rise of advocacy journalism on talk radio, cable television, and the blogosphere in which news is presented overtly from an ideological stance. While departing from the values of objectivity and nonpartisanship, the new advocates have often borrowed formats and themes from the mainstream press. In the case of immigration coverage, conservative advocates adopted the narrative of illegality and eventually carried it forward to a shrill extreme. There was no countervailing narrative from either the mainstream press or progressive advocates because none existed in the repertoire of American journalism.
Starting with Lou Dobbs in 2003, then the anchor of the flagship evening news broadcast on CNN, the narrative of illegality became a topic of choice among conservative practitioners of advocacy journalism. While news coverage alone rarely produces dramatic shifts in policy or public opinion, journalism does exercise a framing function that can have a cumulative effect on the way the public interprets events. As the scholar of media and politics W. Lance Bennett defines it: Framing involves choosing a broad organizing theme for selecting, emphasizing, and linking the elements of a story. Frames are thematic categories that integrate and give meaning to the scene, the characters, their actions, and supporting documentation.
⁸ The framing function can be exercised within a single story, for example, when a candidate’s popularity is explained as a function of race or gender rather than by his or her positions on critical issues. Framing can have a cumulative effect; when stories about gang violence dominate coverage of crime, for instance, it gives the impression that gangs are primarily responsible for criminal violence. In addition, as Shanto Iyengar, a professor of communications and political science at Stanford, has demonstrated in studies of television news coverage, the media can portray events as singular and disconnected. Episodic framing,
as he put it, prevents audiences from accumulating a sense of context and long-term trends.⁹
The news media’s framing of immigration could well have stoked the public’s anxiety over illegal migration and its distrust of the government’s ability to contend with it. Such attitudes contributed to a policy stalemate in the mid-2000s—a time marked by near universal unhappiness with immigration policies and practices combined with an inability to move forward decisively in any direction. At the start of the current decade, both aspects of that situation appear only to have deepened even as opposing opinions among the most fervent advocates have hardened. In some sectors, particularly those who favor tougher enforcement measures, the rhetoric has grown harsher. Three major tendencies in the coverage of immigration by the U.S. news media have produced that perceptual framework, and in examining each of them, one can search for parallels to academic depictions as well. These three tendencies are an episodic and irregular flow of coverage, an overemphasis on illegality, and a portrayal of migrants as protagonists.
• • •
The legendary newspaper editor Eugene Roberts of the Philadelphia Inquirer and the New York Times drew a distinction between stories that break
and those that ooze.
He sought to correct what he perceived as journalism’s neglect of the slowly developing but important trends in American society. Simply by virtue of operating on very short time frames, the news media, of course, are far better suited to the depiction of stories that break. Meanwhile, both the institutional structure and the vocation of the academy, especially in the social sciences, aim to capture patterns and truths that play out over the long term. Like education, health care, and some other matters of public policy, immigration produces a narrative that may be punctuated by high- profile events but is defined by the cumulative impact of many small events that go unnoticed individually.
Journalistic coverage of immigration has been notably episodic, producing spikes of coverage and then long periods when attention falls off. The spikes have been driven by dramatic set-piece events, such as the Elian Gonzalez saga, legislative debates, and protest marches. The surges in coverage have conditioned the public and policymakers to think of immigration as a sudden event, often tinged with the air of crisis. Consider, for example, that immigration coverage by the national desk of the New York Times averaged 102 stories a year from 1980 to 2008 but ranged from a low of 43 stories in 1991 to a high of 217 in 2006. On the CBS Evening News coverage of immigration in 1993 was nearly six times what it was in 1992, nearly three times as much in 2000 as in 1999.
In contrast, the academic depictions of this wave of immigration were tardy in arriving and then the scholarship was slow in gathering momentum. In the intricate hierarchy of status and prestige in the academy, immigration was a domain of very low status throughout much of the current era of migration. With the possible exception of labor economists and urban sociologists (and they never represented the cutting edge of their respective fields), immigration scholarship tended to dwell at the margins of the major theoretical and empirical enterprises that dominated the social sciences in the last quarter of the twentieth century. Until very recently, entire scholarly disciplines completely ignored the phenomenon—academic psychology, among others. There are important institutional factors at work; the time frames involved in academic production combined with the availability of data seemed to have put scholarship behind the curve through much of this era of immigration.
In the 1980s and 1990s major scholarship relied on the decennial census as the essential source for data, and the data then came in what now would be regarded as hopelessly primitive forms. As a result, major monographs, books, and articles relying on census data were typically published in the middle of the decade or even late in the decade. In a rapidly changing field, such delays inevitably diminish influence outside the academy. Many of those works are of enduring value to their disciplines but had less public impact than they deserved because the foreign-born population was growing and changing so quickly during the lag between data collection and publication. That situation improved in the early 2000s, when the American Community Survey started providing yearly data, and statistical techniques improved for combining files from the Current Population Survey to allow detailed analyses of population segments in the years between the decennial census. The cumulative effect has been a slowly gathering but now rapidly expanding pace of scholarship.
A detailed examination of the volume of scholarship on immigration is beyond the scope of this chapter, but let us take the formation of professional associations as one indication of how the academy has responded to this wave of immigration. Arguably, sociology is the discipline that has lent the most attention to this phenomenon, and yet the American Sociological Association did not organize its immigration section until 1994. That same year the Social Science Research Council organized its migration program. Similarly, the American Political Science Association organized its section on race, ethnicity, and politics in 1995 and then a Latino caucus in 1998. It took until 2010 for the American Psychological Association to establish its first Presidential Task Force on Immigration, headed by Carola Suárez-Orozco (see her contribution in this book). It is not that these dates mark the beginning of academic activity. Indeed, scholars with already well-established track records on immigration were involved in launching these activities. The formation of these bodies represented a certain level of recognition within the disciplines, and these groups served to spur much more activity in subsequent years. More broadly, the mid-1990s produced other signs of increased interest in the academy including the publication of a number of important monographs, special issue journals, and books that have laid the foundation for subsequent scholarship.
The overall trend seems quite clear: Since the mid-1990s, the volume of scholarship on immigration, its scope and quality, and the number of scholars attending to the subject have increased very substantially. All this activity came after the 1990 census chronicled a jump in the foreign-born population to 19.8 million, up from 14.1 million in 1980. It also followed the enactment of two major pieces of legislation in 1986 and 1990, and coincided with the development of an anti-immigrant backlash that became manifest in the elections of 1994 and 1996. Scholars started to pay attention to contemporary immigration only after it had become a familiar consideration in politics and policy.
Just as the volume of journalistic coverage has been marked by stark peaks and valleys, the academic output appears to present the opposite profile, arriving late on the scene and then gathering momentum slowly but surely. There is a similar contrast in the topics that have dominated the two depictions. Journalism has focused squarely on migration as a phenomenon that is supposed to be regulated by government but often isn’t. Meanwhile, the academy has focused on migration as an individual and social activity with far less regard to the legal status of individuals or government policies and bureaucracies. Illegal immigrants have never constituted more than a third of the foreign-born population in the United States, and that mark has been reached only in recent years. Nonetheless, illegal immigration and government’s efforts to control it have dominated the news coverage in all sectors of the media by wide margins for many years. This pattern of coverage would logically cause the public and policymakers to associate the influx of the foreign-born with violations of the law, disruption of social norms, and government failures.
For example, an analysis of 1,848 Associated Press stories on immigration topics from 1980 to 2007 showed that 79 percent fit into the framework of illegality. Of 2,614 stories on immigration in the New York Times over the same period, 86 percent dealt with illegality in various forms, and that included 83 percent of the coverage in Washington and 88 percent of the stories from elsewhere in the country. The news media’s focus on illegality appears to stem at least in part from an institutional bias that draws attention to malfeasance. According to deeply ingrained ideas about what kind of events deserve attention in journalism, any act that violates any law is a priori more newsworthy than the observance of law. And those depictions are not unwaveringly negative. Journalistic narratives relish characters in the underdog role, and the striving illegal migrant who braves dangers to cross the border in search of a better life often fits the bill (see Patrick J. McDonnell’s chapter in this volume).
Given those preoccupations, the media has inevitably tended to ignore legal immigration even when set-piece news events would have justified coverage. For example, in 1990 Congress passed the first major revision of legal immigration statutes in thirty-five years, substantially increasing migration flows and changing their composition. This legislation has altered the face of America. The Washington Post covered the debate leading up to enactment with a total of 2,078 words of news copy in four routine Capitol Hill stories. The bill’s potential impact was not examined in Washington’s newspaper of record until a week after it was passed. In contrast, when Congress produced a law dealing exclusively with illegal immigration in 1986, the Washington Post published ten stories about the deliberations in the month before passage and seven follow-ups in the immediate