2006 Second Quarter Issues Report

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2006 Second Quarter Issues Report Date Show Key Segment Topic Brief Description Duration Reporter - Guest(s) UCLA...FIGHT, FIGHT, FIGHT UCLA's victory over LSU and their national title game this evening against Florida 4/3/06 AT SPOR 10:00 Steve Springer IMMIGRATION AND THE REPUBLICAN Recent immigration legislation proposals have driven a wedge between Holly Bailey, Shawn SPLIT Republicans, who either support the President’s vision of amnesty and a guest- 4/3/06 AT IMM 15:00 worker program, or those who want to construct a strong physical and legal barrier Steele 4/3/06 AT SPOR BASEBALL OPENING DAY Both the Dodgers and the Angels play their season openers Monday. 20:00 2008 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION who is likely to run and which candidates should the major parties put their 4/3/06 AT POLI 30:00 Matt Bai, Chris Lahane money behind? BIRD FLU UPDATE Larry talks with experts about the dangers of Avian Flu reaching our region and 4/3/06 AT HEAL 45:00 what officials are doing to prepare for it. ARTIFICAL BLADDERS IMPLANTED IN Scientists have now successfully grown and implanted the first lab-grown Dr. Alan Retik, Gary 4/4/06 AT HEAL 20:00 CHILDREN bladders cultured from patient's own cells. Sender CALIFORNIA MOVES TO CONTAIN California officials have pushed forward on two fronts in the fight against climate 4/4/06 AT ENV 40:00 Ilsa Setziol, GLOBAL WARMING change UNIVERSAL PRESCHOOL A report released today by Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE) asks Bruce Fuller, Maryann 4/5/06 AT EDU some tough questions about the viability and benefits of universal preschool 10:00 O'Sullivan HOMELESS PLAN PASSES COUNTY the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors approved a $100 million plan Jan Perry, Rabbi 4/5/06 AT HOUS SUPERVISOR'S yesterday that will establish five regional homeless centers across the county to 20:00 provide shelter and social services for transients Marvin Gross LABOR UNREST SPARKS HUGE A few months ago violent protests rolled across suburban areas of France. Hugh Schofield, 4/5/06 AT LAB 30:00 PROTESTS IN FRANCE Dominic Thomas PROPOSITION 36 STUDY A newly released UCLA study reports that California taxpayers save nearly Angela Hawken, Mark $2.50 for every dollar invested in nonviolent drug offenders eligible for substance Kleiman, Kathryn Jett, 4/5/06 AT LAW abuse treatment under the state's Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act of 30:00 Denise Ducheny , Lisa 2000 (SACPA), or Proposition 36 Fisher SAGE WISDOM FROM MASTERS OF THE In his new book, The Well-Timed Strategy, author Peter Navarro shares 4/5/06 AT LIT BUSINESS CYCLE managerial insights that led some of the best companies in the world through 30:00 Peter Navarro troubled waters into profitability. NEWLY DISCOVERED FOSSIL LINKS In a literal story with legs, the discovery of a new arctic fossil is said to fill an 4/6/06 AT SCI 20:00 Ted Daeschler FISH AND LAND ANIMALS evolutionary gap between fish and limbed animals. NEW IMMIGRATION PROPOSAL "PATH Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist offered a new plan yesterday to overhaul US Arian Campo-Flores, 4/6/06 AT IMM TO CITIZENSHIP" immigration policy. It would offer a path for immigrants to eventually apply for 20:00 citizenship. John Campbell Date Show Key Segment Topic Brief Description Duration Reporter - Guest(s) HIV, SEXUAL HISTORY AND THE The California Supreme Court is hearing a woman's claim that her x-husband 4/6/06 AT HEAL 20:00 Robert Bradley Sears CALIFORNIA SUPREME COURT owes her damages because he infected her with HIV. BAD REPORTING OR BAD NEWS?: Some Bush administration officials and prominent conservatives have been Tim Graham, 4/6/06 AT MEDI 30:00 crying foul over the media's recent cover-up Jonathan Taplin MASSACHUSETTS LAWMAKERS This week, a bill requiring mandatory health insurance in Massachusetts passed Fawn Phelps, Gerald 4/6/06 AT HEAL APPROVE MANDATORY HEALTH that state's legislature with overwhelming support. 30:00 INSURANCE Kominski IMMIGRATION BILLS STALL stalled late in the day and chances are no action will be taken at least until after 4/7/06 AT IMM 10:00 Arian Campo-Flores the two-week Easter recess that begins today LEAKER AND CHIEF? Court papers filed by the prosecutor in the CIA leak case against I. Lewis Jane Harmon, Doug 4/7/06 AT POLI ``Scooter'' Libby said the President himself authorized Libby to disclose 20:00 information from a classified intelligence report Kmiec JUDAS...NOT SUCH A BAD FELLOW A group of researchers, working with the National Geographic Society, has 4/7/06 AT RELI 30:00 Marvin Meyer AFTER ALL discovered the only known text of what is known as "The Gospel of Judas". FILMWEEK Larry Mantle and critics discuss this week's new releases Henry Sheehan, Jean 4/7/06 AT ENT 30:00 Oppenheimer PATT MORRISON Larry Mantle talks with Patt Morrison about her first day at KPCC as host of “Patt 4/10/06 AT ENT 05:00 PATT MORRISON Morrison.” VERNON ELECTION The election is between three individuals who moved to town recently up against 4/10/06 AT SAC 05:00 Shelby Grad the incumbents who have ruled Vernon for approximately 50 years. SEVERE CUTBACK EXPECTED IN WEST Pacific Fishery Management Council’s recommendation to severely limit Glenn Spain, Dave 4/10/06 AT ECON COAST SALMON FISHING commercial, recreational and tribal salmon fishing off the Coast of California and 20:00 Oregon this year. Bitts, Greg Addington GLOBAL WARMING AND CLIMATE Larry Mantle talks with acclaimed scientist, explorer and conservationist Tim 4/10/06 AT SCI 30:00 Tim Flannery CHANGE Flannery about his new book, The Weather Makers BERNARD-HENRI LEVY Larry Mantle talks with Bernard-Henri Levy, one of France’s leading writers, 4/10/06 AT LIT 30:00 Bernard-Henri Levy philosophers, journalists, and activists about his new book American Vertigo: NATIONAL DAY OF ACTION FOR Larry Mantle talks with various individuals throughout Southern California and Eugenio Arene, IMMIGRATION REFORM nationally about today’s rallies. 4/10/06 AT IMM 30:00 Angelica Salas, Nativo Lopez, Bill Zeeble GOVERNOR SCHWARZENEGGER’S The Governor is expected to announce his support for a market-based approach Terry Tamminen, 4/11/06 AT ENV GLOBAL WARMING PLAN to combat global warming which has drawn criticism from Republicans and 20:00 Larry Gersten, business leaders. Richard Stapler MEETINGS AND EMPLOYEE WELL-BEING Employees are attending more workplace meetings than ever, but little is known 4/11/06 AT LAB 30:00 Steven Rogelberg about how employees actually feel about them. Date Show Key Segment Topic Brief Description Duration Reporter - Guest(s) CALIFORNIA’S UNIQUE PLACE IN A In this look at California politics, economics and culture, writer Peter Schrag is 4/11/06 AT LIT 30:00 Peter Schrag GLOBAL WORLD critical of the state’s current solutions to its many problems. THE FUTURE OF PAY TV IN CALIFORNIA A new Assembly bill would allow telephone companies to compete directly Lloyd Levine, Marc against cable television providers. Burgat, Bill Bogaard, 4/11/06 AT ENT 40:00 Regina Costa, Adam Clayton Powell III IRAN ANNOUNCES IT HAS ENRICHED Defying international will, Iran is moving toward large-scale uranium enrichment. 4/12/06 AT FOR 30:00 Jim Walsh, Helle Dale URANIUM GAME OF SHADOWS: STEROIDS IN In December 2004, after more than a year of investigation, two San Francisco 4/12/06 AT LIT PROFESSIONAL SPORTS Chronicle reporters, Lance Williams and Mark Fainaru-Wada (FAIN-uh-roo WAH- 30:00 Lance Williams da), broke the story of BALCO. DISCRIMINATION ALLEGATION IN L.A. The Los Angeles Fire Commission held a public hearing Tuesday regarding City Frank Stoltze, Genie FIRE DEPARTMENT Controller Laura Chick's audit of the LA Fire Department. Harrison, Captain Jerry Thomas, 4/12/06 AT RACE 60:00 Genethia Hudley- Hayes, Tennie Pierce, Alecia Mathis, Brenda Lee, Gary Mellinger JACK JONES Larry Mantle talks with Grammy award-winning vocalist Jack Jones about his 4/13/06 AT ENT 20:00 JACK JONES career and his performance at the Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts ORANGE COUNTY JOURNALISTS OC Roundtable about current OC news items Jean Pasco, Gustavo 4/13/06 AT OC 30:00 ROUNDTABLE Arellano PHIL ANGELIDES Phil Angelides was elected California's State Treasurer in 1998 and continues in 4/13/06 AT SAC 30:00 Phil Angelides that position today. FREE SPEECH & HATE SPEECH Can anti-discrimination policies be discriminatory? Some Christian groups think John Eastman, Jenny 4/13/06 AT LAW 40:00 so. Pizer FILMWEEK Larry Mantle and critics discuss this week's new releases Andy Klein, Henry 4/14/06 AT ENT 60:00 Sheehan, Charles Solomon PROPOSITION 82 DEBATE The “Preschool for All” initiative on the June ballot is supported by the leading Bill Hauck, Karen Hill- 4/14/06 AT SAC Democratic Gubernatorial candidates, but opposed by Governor 60:00 Schwarzenegger. Scott PREVIEW OF PARENT-TEACHER six community organizations and United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) will offer 4/17/06 AT EDU 10:00 AJ Duffy COALITION ANNOUNCEMENT their proposal for LAUSD reform Date Show Key Segment Topic Brief Description Duration Reporter - Guest(s) HOMELESS RULING QUASHES LAPD a ruling from a federal appeals court will make it impossible for the LAPD to clear Victor Franco Jr, 4/17/06 AT HOUS 20:00 PLAN ON SKID ROW the homeless from sleeping on the sidewalks Ramona Ripston TAX TIME And we’re paying, but what do we really think about them? Karlyn Bowman, John 4/17/06 AT ECON 30:00 Irons, Phillip Swagel EARTHQUAKE HISTORY AND NEW Judy Muller talks to historian and author Simon Winchester about the quake.
Recommended publications
  • La Gran Marcha: Anti-Racism and Immigrants Rights in Southern California
    La Gran Marcha: Anti-Racism and Immigrants Rights in Southern California Jenna M. Loyd1 Department of Geography, Syracuse University 144 Eggers Hall, Syracuse, NY 13244-1020 USA Email: [email protected] Andrew Burridge Department of Geography, University of Southern California, 416 Kaprielian Hall, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0255 USA Email: [email protected] Abstract Millions of people across the United States took to the streets in spring 2006 to protest repressive immigration legislation, demand just immigration reform, and seek justice in daily life. This article has two aims. First, we seek to intervene in the popular immigration debate, which denies racism and claims to be concerned only with law-and-order. Second, we analyze (im)migration politics in relation to national racial formations. That is, racialized immigration policies do not exist apart from a racially stratified citizenry. We rely on the concept of social death to trace state policies of immigration and criminalization as key sites of interracial and transnational struggles against racism and for justice and liberation. Thus, we seek to elucidate possibilities for anti-racist alliances and social change. We conclude with a discussion of the ways in which we see the immigrants rights movement connecting with other struggles for social justice, and the implications that 1 © Jenna M. Loyd and Andrew Burridge, 2007 La Gran Marcha: Anti-Racism and Immigrants Rights in Southern California 2 concepts of national racial formation and social death have for the movement against global apartheid. KEY WORDS: immigrants rights, racism, national racial formation, social death, criminalization, militarization, United States “Immigration politics also surfaced in California’s gubernatorial race … with Gov.
    [Show full text]
  • Social Movements, Political Goals and the May 1 Marches: Communicating ∗ Protest in Polysemic Media Environments
    Social Movements, Political Goals and the May 1 Marches: Communicating ∗ Protest in Polysemic Media Environments Louisa Edgerly Department of Communication, University of Washington Amoshaun Toft Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, University of Washington Bothell Mary Lynn Veden Department of Communication, University of Arkansas Abstract This paper presents an analysis of patterns of representation of the May 1, 2006 “day without an immigrant” marches in three news genres by comparing their use of language to self- presentations by movement participants. We argue that the growing popularity of niche and opinion oriented news programming is leading to a bifurcation of news norms. Instead of a homogenous journalistic audience, movement participants who seek to “send a message” through mediated news venues are presented with a greater level of polysemic interpretations among journalists. We present three themes in our analysis of how activists and journalists discursively produced the May 1 actions through language use: economic impact, policy/rights , and law/order . We argue that journalists engaged with these themes differently in the three samples: the 297 daily newspaper front pages we analyzed portrayed a negotiated reading position, Lou Dobbs Tonight an oppositional reading position, and Democracy Now! a dominant reading position. We conclude by noting several implications for the study of political communication in the context of mass mediated political protest. Introduction It is well known that social movement actors face a paradox when it comes to media coverage; they must conform to the news values of conflict, novelty and personalization just to attract journalistic attention (Cook 1998; Gans 1979; Tuchman 1978), yet such tactical choices aimed at ∗ (2011) In press in the International Journal of Press/Politics .
    [Show full text]
  • Ningún Ser Humano Es Ilegal!
    No Human Is Illegal: ¡Ningún Ser Humano es Ilegal! immigrantsolidarity.org An Educator’s Guide for Addressing Immigration in the Classroom New York Collective of Radical Educators http://www.nycore.org April 2006 New York Collective of Radical Educators (NYCoRE) NYCoRE is a group of public school educators committed to fighting for social justice in our school system and society at large, by organizing and mobilizing teachers, developing curriculum, and working with community, parent, and student organizations. We are educators who believe that education is an integral part of social change and that we must work both inside and outside the classroom because the struggle for justice does not end when the school bell rings. http://www.nycore.org [email protected] To join the NYCoRE listserv, send email to [email protected] Table of Contents 1. How To Use This Guide……………………………………………………...…….…P. 2 2. NYCoRE’s Recommendations and Statement in English and Spanish..…… P. 3 3. Participate with NYCoRE in the May 1st Great American Boycott……..….…..P. 4 4. Encourage and Protect Students who Organize and Participate…… ………P. 5 a. Recent Press about Student Walkouts………………………….…………….P. 5 b. Know Your Students’ Rights……………………………………………………P. 6 5. Connect your Activism to Your Academics……………………………….………P. 7 a. The Proposed Legislation HR 4437……………………………………………P. 7 b. Organizing Responses…………………………………………………………..P. 8 c. Curricular Materials and Resources……………………………………………P. 10 6. New York City Resources……………………………..………………………………P. 11 How To Use This Guide This guide is most useful when used online, as opposed to a paper copy. Most of the resources in this guide are web- based links, so if viewed online, just click on the links.
    [Show full text]
  • News Frames and Hegemonic Discourses in the Immigration Debates in the United States, 2006 and 2010
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by D-Scholarship@Pitt “EVERYBODY AROUND HERE IS FROM SOME PLACE ELSE”: NEWS FRAMES AND HEGEMONIC DISCOURSES IN THE IMMIGRATION DEBATES IN THE UNITED STATES, 2006 AND 2010 by Sharon Madriaga Quinsaat B.A. Communication Research, University of the Philippines-Diliman, 1999 M.A. Social Sciences, University of Calfornia-Irvine, 2009 Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts University of Pittsburgh 2011 UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH KENNETH P. DIETRICH SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES This thesis was presented by Sharon Madriaga Quinsaat It was defended on July 7, 2011 and approved by Dr. Akiko Hashimoto, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology Dr. John Markoff, Distinguished University Professor, Department of Sociology Thesis Director: Dr. Suzanne Staggenborg, Professor, Department of Sociology ii Copyright © by Sharon Madriaga Quinsaat 2011 iii “EVERYBODY AROUND HERE IS FROM SOME PLACE ELSE”: NEWS FRAMES AND HEGEMONIC DISCOURSES IN THE IMMIGRATION DEBATES IN THE UNITED STATES, 2006 AND 2010 Sharon Madriaga Quinsaat, M.A. University of Pittsburgh, 2011 In 2006, the United States House of Representatives introduced a bill that seeks to criminalize unauthorized immigrants, subjecting them to detention and deportation. Four years later, the Arizona State Legislature passed a similar measure, which classifies an alien’s presence in Arizona without the possession of proper immigration documents as a state misdemeanor. Both pieces of legislation entered the public sphere and stimulated debates on immigration, as cleavages within and among the Democrats and Republicans surfaced and opposition turned into highly publicized events.
    [Show full text]
  • I Find That the Catholic Church's Campaign During the 1990S Utilized the Internal Structure of the Church to Reach out to Cath
    Heredia 1 “Welcoming the Stranger”: The Catholic Church and the Struggle for Immigrant Rights in Los Angeles Luisa Heredia University of California Riverside Riverside, CA Research Paper Series on Latino Immigrant Civic and Political Participation, No. 4 June 2009 www.wilsoncenter.org/migrantparticipation Heredia 2 “Welcoming the Stranger”: The Catholic Church and the Struggle for Immigrant Rights in Los Angeles “For I was hungry and you gave me food; I was thirsty and you gave me drink; I was a stranger and you made me welcome; naked and you clothed me, sick and you visited me, in prison and you came to see me.” Then the virtuous will say to him in reply, “Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you; or thirsty and gave you drink? When did we see you a stranger and make you welcome; naked and clothe you; sick or in prison and go to see you?” And the King will answer, “I tell you solemnly, insofar as you did this to one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did it to me.” Gospel of Matthew 25:35-40 Introduction During the spring of 2006 millions of immigrants and their supporters took to the streets across the nation to protest “enforcement-only” legislation that criminalized undocumented immigrants and service providers. Although these demonstrations surprised the nation by their seemingly spontaneous nature, a significant number of immigrant rights organizations have mobilized and continue to mobilize around immigrant rights.1 Los Angeles, in particular, has a rich history of immigrant rights activism. Prior to the heightened
    [Show full text]
  • N Cardona Collection, 1993-2012
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c800084m No online items Guide to the Julián Cardona Collection, 1993-2012 Special Collections & Archives Oviatt Library California State University, Northridge 18111 Nordhoff St. Northridge, CA, 91330 URL: https://library.csun.edu/SCA Email: [email protected] © Copyright 2012 Special Collections &Archives. All rights reserved. Guide to the Julián Cardona TBC/JCA 1 Collection, 1993-2012 Overview of the Collection Collection Title: Julián Cardona Collection Dates: 1993-2012 Identification: TBC/JCA Creator: Cardona, Julián, 1960- Physical Description: 15.80 linear feet Language of Materials: English Spanish; Castilian Repository: Special Collections Abstract: Photographer Julián Cardona has reported and documented on the conditions of Ciudad Juárez since 1993 when he started his career at El Diario de Juárez. Between 2009-2013 he was a reporter for Reuters News Agency. His work has appeared in numerous exhibitions and been featured in many publications. He has collaborated with journalist and author Charles Bowden to produced the book Exodus/Èxodo (Austin, University of Texas Press, 2008). Cardona's work documents violence in the border region, the effects of globalization, and the changing landscape of the Mariscal District. The collection includes images from 2008 when the level of homicides reached its climax to the end of the year 2012. Biographical Information: Born in 1960 in Zacatecas, Mexico, Julián Cardona migrated to the border city of Ciudad Juárez with his family as a small child. In 1993, Cardona started his photojournalism career at El Fronterizo and El Diario de Juárez. Working for El Diario, Cardona documented violence in Juárez from 1993 to 2012.
    [Show full text]
  • Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-43412-7 — Latino Mass Mobilization Chris Zepeda-Millán Index More Information
    Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-43412-7 — Latino Mass Mobilization Chris Zepeda-Millán Index More Information Index ASuLado(On Your Side), 84 American Indian Movement, 150 Acción Comunitaria La Aurora, 105, 118, anti-immigration groups. See also nativist 230 extreme groups ACORN, 185 electoral threat to elected officials, 180 Act Now to Stop War and End Racism growth of, 138 (ANSWER) Coalition, 113 response to Comprehensive Immigration activists, 44–46 Reform Act of 2007, 179–80 alliances among foreign-born, 104 April 10. See National Day of Action for business leaders, 58 Immigrant Justice college-educated migrants, 45–46 Archilla, Ana Maria, 106, 110–11, 144 educated urban migrants, 45 Arizona farm labor crew leaders, 52 border enforcement, 29–30 feelings of solidarity among, 48–49 CASA presence in, 32 local leaders, 45 Latino mobilization in 2008 election, messaging strategies, 57 192 motivations of, 52 Latino mobilization in 2016 election, as resources, 56–59 213 small business owners, 52–53 Mexican migration to, 29 use of new and alternative media by, 69 “papers please” law in, 209 Acuña, Rudy, 17, 32 protesters from, 87 AFL-CIO, 37, 164, 230 voter registration campaign in, 189–90 African-Americans, mass incarceration of, Ya Es Hora! campaign in, 187 150 Arpaio, Joe, 212 Agriculture Coalition for Immigration Arreola, Artemio, 76 Reform (ACIR), 40, 164, 170, 184, Asian Americans for Equality (AAE), 107, 230 230 Aguascalientes (magazine), 58 Asman, David, 142 Alabama, protesters from, 87 Asociación Tepeyac, 125, 230 Alatorre, Soledad “Chole,” 32, 89 Associated Press, 133, 206 Alianza Dominicana, 111–12, 116, 123, Association of Senegalese in America 124, 230 (ASA), 120, 230 alternative media, 68–69.
    [Show full text]
  • European Journal of American Studies, 4-3 | 2009 “A Day Without Immigrants” 2
    European journal of American studies 4-3 | 2009 Special Issue: Immigration “A Day Without Immigrants” Benita Heiskanen Electronic version URL: https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/7717 DOI: 10.4000/ejas.7717 ISSN: 1991-9336 Publisher European Association for American Studies Electronic reference Benita Heiskanen, ““A Day Without Immigrants””, European journal of American studies [Online], 4-3 | 2009, document 3, Online since 01 December 2009, connection on 08 July 2021. URL: http:// journals.openedition.org/ejas/7717 ; DOI: https://doi.org/10.4000/ejas.7717 This text was automatically generated on 8 July 2021. Creative Commons License “A Day Without Immigrants” 1 “A Day Without Immigrants” Benita Heiskanen 1. Introduction1 1 On 1 May 2006, over a million mostly Latino/a, but also Middle Eastern, Asian, and Eastern European immigrants took to the streets of major U.S. cities—such as New York, Chicago, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, Miami, Phoenix, and Denver—to express disapproval of H.R. 4437, the Border Protection, Anti-Terrorism, and Illegal Immigration Control Act of 2005.2 The proposed bill, which passed the House of Representatives on 16 December 2005, included turning unlawful entrance into the United States a felony, punishable by imprisonment; militarizing the U.S.-Mexican border, complete with 700 miles of fencing erected along the border; and deporting undocumented and “terrorist” aliens.3 2 Because of its sweeping provisions, the proposal—dubbed as the “Sensenbrenner Bill” after its sponsor James Sensenbrenner (R-Wisconsin)—immediately created uproar across the United States.4 The conflation of immigrants, documented, undocumented, and citizens alike, with criminality and terrorism in the post-9/11 period, in particular, was a source of outrage among many immigrant communities.
    [Show full text]
  • Latino Identity and the Immigration Rights Movement of 2006: the Origins and Consequences of an Assimilationist Approach
    Latino Identity and the Immigration Rights Movement of 2006: The Origins and Consequences of an Assimilationist Approach Author: Allison Ramirez Persistent link: http://hdl.handle.net/2345/516 This work is posted on eScholarship@BC, Boston College University Libraries. Boston College Electronic Thesis or Dissertation, 2007 Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. © Allison Ramirez 2007 Abstract _____________________________________ In December of 2005, the United States House of Representatives passed the infamous Sensenbrenner-King immigration reform legislation that, if written into law, would have negatively affected the situation of millions of undocumented workers in the United States, mostly originating from Latin America. In response, the Latino community in the U.S. mobilized to organize a wave of rallies across the country during the spring of 2006. This thesis explores the construction of the collective action frame employed by movement organizers to mobilize protesters. It ultimately finds that the rhetoric of assimilation was chosen because of its ability to resonate both with the goal of effecting political change as well as with the identity of the potential audience. It was nevertheless found to be inadequate in addressing the larger issues of injustice affecting immigrants as it served to reinforce and perpetuate the oppression of consciousness that has often left Latinos feeling that their heritage must be rejected in order to be deemed worthy of certain rights in the United States. While movement organizers managed to mobilize millions of people across the country, their influence on legislation has yet to be seen, as no immigration reforms have been written into law as of the writing of this thesis.
    [Show full text]
  • Inmigración No Autorizada En Los Estados Unidos: Impacto, Representación De Los Medios Y Reforma De La Legalización
    INNOVA Research Journal, ISSN 2477-9024 (Agosto, 2017). Vol. 2, No.8.1 pp. 281-293 DOI: https://doi.org/10.33890/innova.v2.n8.1.2017.379 URL: http://revistas.uide.edu.ec/index.php/innova/index Correo: [email protected] Inmigración no autorizada en los Estados Unidos: impacto, representación de los medios y reforma de la legalización Unauthorized Immigration in the United States: Impact, Media Representation and Legalization Reform Jorge Freddy Bolaños López Universidad ECOTEC, Ecuador Autor para correspondencia: [email protected] Fecha de recepción: 04 de Agosto de 2017 - Fecha de aceptación: 10 de Agosto de 2017 Abstract: This article analyses the effects that unauthorized immigration has caused in different aspects in the United States (US), the media portrayal and treatment undocumented people and the legalization reform initiative receive by different media channels. Considering and contrasting different academic analysis and using contemporary examples in order to highlight the several issues undocumented people face on an everyday basis, the article offers an overview of possible future scenarios regarding the legal instability of the people affected by their migratory status and how likely it is that they will be offered legalization. Keywords: immigration, reform, legalization, amnesty, undocumented, immigrants, media, representation, portrayal. Resumen: Este artículo analiza los efectos que la migración desautorizada ha causado en diferentes ámbitos en los Estados Unidos (US), la representación y trato mediático que personas indocumentadas y la reforma migratoria reciben de parte de diferentes medios. Considerando y contrastando diferentes análisis académicos y usando ejemplos contemporáneos para resaltar las variadas situaciones que personas indocumentadas enfrentan diariamente, este artículo ofrece una visión de posibles escenarios futuros en cuanto a la inestabilidad legal de la gente afectada por su estado migratorio y qué tan posible es que se les ofrezca legalización.
    [Show full text]
  • “A Day Without Immigrants”
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by University of Southern Denmark Research Output European journal of American studies Vol 4, No 3 | 2009 Special Issue: Immigration “A Day Without Immigrants” Benita Heiskanen Publisher European Association for American Studies Electronic version URL: http://ejas.revues.org/7717 DOI: 10.4000/ejas.7717 ISSN: 1991-9336 Electronic reference Benita Heiskanen, « “A Day Without Immigrants” », European journal of American studies [Online], Vol 4, No 3 | 2009, document 3, Online since 01 December 2009, connection on 30 September 2016. URL : http://ejas.revues.org/7717 ; DOI : 10.4000/ejas.7717 This text was automatically generated on 30 septembre 2016. Creative Commons License “A Day Without Immigrants” 1 “A Day Without Immigrants” Benita Heiskanen 1 1 On 1 May 2006, over a million mostly Latino/a, but also Middle Eastern, Asian, and Eastern European immigrants took to the streets of major U.S. cities—such as New York, Chicago, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, Miami, Phoenix, and Denver—to express disapproval of H.R. 4437, the Border Protection, Anti-Terrorism, and Illegal Immigration Control Act of 2005.2 The proposed bill, which passed the House of Representatives on 16 December 2005, included turning unlawful entrance into the United States a felony, punishable by imprisonment; militarizing the U.S.-Mexican border, complete with 700 miles of fencing erected along the border; and deporting undocumented and “terrorist” aliens.3 2 Because of its sweeping provisions, the proposal—dubbed as the “Sensenbrenner Bill” after its sponsor James Sensenbrenner (R-Wisconsin)—immediately created uproar across the United States.4 The conflation of immigrants, documented, undocumented, and citizens alike, with criminality and terrorism in the post-9/11 period, in particular, was a source of outrage among many immigrant communities.
    [Show full text]
  • Publicity and Status at the International Line
    lines and spheres “We’re Mexican Too”: Publicity and Status at the International Line Rihan Yeh The Public at the Line In Tijuana the “International Line” is not the border per se. Rather, la Línea refers to San Ysidro, the city’s main port of entry between Mexico and the United States, and to the area just south. It refers to the area that borders on the border, where the line forms to cross north. I have heard it speculated that la Línea is a bilingual pun summing up the border condition: two meanings sharing one word, one in Spanish and one borrowed from English. Neither meaning quite explains the name. Properly, la Línea could indeed refer to the international boundary, as in the phrase la línea divisoria, “the dividing line” — but in Tijuana the word is not commonly used or even understood in this sense. As a loan from English, it refers to the lines of cars and pedestrians wait- ing to cross. People ask, for example, if there is a lot of línea: is the line long? But I have never heard the word used to speak of a queue in any other context. Línea’s two meanings, neither of which stands on its own, run perpendicular to each other: an east-west line signifying prohibition and a north-south line signi- fying passage. The two are reduced to the point where they cross, as when my elderly roommate drew me a map of the port of entry and environs. “Let’s see,” I said, confused about which way the boundary ran and then, stumbling, not find- Versions of this essay were presented at the Internal Seminar of the Colegio de la Frontera Norte’s Department of Cultural Studies, Tijuana, June 4, 2007, and at the Politics, Communications, Society workshop at the University of Chicago, January 23, 2008.
    [Show full text]