The Media's Portrayal of Immigration

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Date
2017-04-01
Authors
Abalu, Omokhoya
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Greenlee School of Journalism and Communication
The Greenlee School of Journalism and Communication offers two majors: Advertising (instructing students in applied communication for work in business or industry), and Journalism and Mass Communication (instructing students in various aspects of news and information organizing, writing, editing, and presentation on various topics and in various platforms). The Department of Agricultural Journalism was formed in 1905 in the Division of Agriculture. In 1925 its name was changed to the Department of Technical Journalism. In 1969 its name changed to the Department of Journalism and Mass Communications; from 1969 to 1989 the department was directed by all four colleges, and in 1989 was placed under the direction of the College of Sciences and Humanities (later College of Liberal Arts and Sciences). In 1998 its name was changed to the Greenlee School of Journalism and Communication.
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Honors Projects and Posters
University Honors Program

The Honors project is potentially the most valuable component of an Honors education. Typically Honors students choose to do their projects in their area of study, but some will pick a topic of interest unrelated to their major.

The Honors Program requires that the project be presented at a poster presentation event. Poster presentations are held each semester. Most students present during their senior year, but may do so earlier if their honors project has been completed.

This site presents project descriptions and selected posters for Honors projects completed since the Fall 2015 semester.

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Greenlee School of Journalism and Communication
Abstract

This study analyzed representations of immigration in three Iowan newspapers between November 2015 and November 2016, focusing on three types of news organizations with different audiences: the Iowa State Daily, the Ames Tribune and the Des Moines Register. Stories covering immigration were mostly tailored toward political campaigns and rhetoric. Representations of immigrants were often marked by negative connotations and labels – illegal immigrants, discrimination, marginalization, etc. Immigrants were mostly portrayed as Mexicans or Latin Americans, and the topic was often linked to terrorism and Donald Trump’s rhetoric of building a wall to keep illegal [Mexican] immigrants out and banning “bad people” from terror-prone countries. Articles focusing on immigration did a good job on reporting on campaign rhetoric, and some analyses/editorials focused on the personalized narratives and humanitarian frames of immigration. These news organizations, however, enacted minimal effort to cover in-depth stories about immigration based on more diverse samples and sources, facts, and angles. Iowa is one of the most important states in the nation because of its role in shaping the outcome of elections. Immigration has become an important factor of political propaganda in the U.S. and many other countries, especially regarding border control and refugees. The dominant image of immigration and related topics shaped in Iowa through the media may in turn influence how other states perceive immigrants and immigration because of the messages received from media’s political coverage.

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