Abstract
In this article, we investigate the role that pro-immigrant organizations play in immigrant racialization. Drawing on a critical case study from the longest standing immigrant rights organization in North Carolina, we demonstrate how immigrant rights organizations can racialize new Latinx arrivals even as they advocate for them. We interrogate the organization’s multi-year, state-wide campaign to counteract mounting public characterizations of Latinx immigrants as drunk drivers. Analyzing a critical juncture in this campaign, we demonstrate how El Pueblo, in their effort to contest the mainstream racialization of Latinxs, unintentionally doubled down on that same racialization, buying into respectability politics and reinforcing derogatory stereotypes of Latinxs. We outline three central maneuvers that grounded this particular respectability politics campaign and demonstrate the utility of respectability politics as a framework for understanding organizational racialization processes. These findings suggest the need to shift focus toward community organizations as key sites of immigrant racialization and highlight the need for inquiry into the racialized assumptions of pro-immigrant forces.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 1737-1757 |
Number of pages | 21 |
Journal | American Behavioral Scientist |
Volume | 66 |
Issue number | 13 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Nov 2022 |
Funding
The authors would like to thank the follow individuals for their research assistance: Chris Cates, Caitlin Graham, Anna Holleman, Zhongze Mark Wei, and Liann Yamashita.
Keywords
- immigration
- Latinos
- organizations
- race
- respectability politics
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Social Psychology
- Cultural Studies
- Education
- Sociology and Political Science
- General Social Sciences