Rebuilding Without Papers: Disaster Migration and the Local Reception of Immigrants After Hurricane Katrina

IF 1.8 Q2 SOCIOLOGY Social Currents Pub Date : 2022-09-20 DOI:10.1177/23294965221125646
H. Brown, Zhongze Wei, Michelle Lazaran, Christopher Cates, Jennifer A. Jones
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Abstract

After Hurricane Katrina decimated the Gulf Coast in 2005, thousands of Latinx immigrants arrived in the region to work in reconstruction, one case of the growing and global phenomenon of disaster migration. Drawing on newspaper content analysis, in-depth interviews with immigrant service providers, and archival materials from Mississippi for the years surrounding Hurricane Katrina (2003-2009), we ask what reception these disaster migrants encountered upon arrival and how that reception changed as they settled permanently in the state. We find that public discourse about immigrants became markedly more positive when disaster migrants arrived en masse, with the media and public characterizing immigrants as valuable, hard workers. Negative characterizations shifted to portray immigrants as drains on public resources. However, these changes were temporary. By 2009, public debate about immigrants reverted to pre-disaster trends with only one exception. Across our study period, we find a steady rise in claims that immigrants faced racism and discrimination. Our findings suggest that disasters may briefly transform the social and cultural bases of material inequalities but are unlikely to produce lasting change.
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无纸重建:卡特里娜飓风后的灾难移民和当地移民接收
2005年卡特里娜飓风摧毁墨西哥湾沿岸后,数千名拉丁裔移民抵达该地区从事重建工作,这是全球灾难移民现象日益严重的一个例子。根据报纸内容分析、对移民服务提供商的深入采访,以及卡特里娜飓风(2003-2009年)前后密西西比州的档案材料,我们询问这些灾难移民在抵达时遇到了什么样的接待,以及当他们永久定居在该州时,这种接待是如何变化的。我们发现,当灾难移民大批抵达时,公众对移民的讨论变得更加积极,媒体和公众将移民描述为有价值的辛勤工作者。负面描述转向将移民描绘成公共资源的消耗者。然而,这些变化是暂时的。到2009年,关于移民的公开辩论又回到了灾难前的趋势,只有一个例外。在我们的研究期间,我们发现移民面临种族主义和歧视的说法稳步上升。我们的研究结果表明,灾难可能会短暂改变物质不平等的社会和文化基础,但不太可能产生持久的变化。
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来源期刊
Social Currents
Social Currents SOCIOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: Social Currents, the official journal of the Southern Sociological Society, is a broad-ranging social science journal that focuses on cutting-edge research from all methodological and theoretical orientations with implications for national and international sociological communities. The uniqueness of Social Currents lies in its format. The front end of every issue is devoted to short, theoretical, agenda-setting contributions and brief, empirical and policy-related pieces. The back end of every issue includes standard journal articles that cover topics within specific subfields of sociology, as well as across the social sciences more broadly.
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