In the days and weeks following the September 11 terrorist attacks, reports emerged of hate crimes, discrimination, and profiling directed at Arab Americans, Arabs, and Muslims in the United States. Although aware that the primary targets of the public and private response against terrorism were those of Arab or Muslim appearance, I realized that the backlash within the United States also affected Latinas/os and certain other subordinated groups. This Article grew out of my concern that while Latinas/os at first might be deemed safe by the American public, their negative societal construction made their targeting inevitable as the fervent, amorphous war on terrorism took shape. Below I detail perceptions of Latinas/os in society\u27s imag...
Immigration politics has been significantly altered by the advent of America’s war on terror and the...
Projection of the terrorist narrative onto the bodies of Arabs, Muslims, Middle Easterns, and South ...
In the aftermath of the events of September 11, 2001, the virtually instantaneous hegemony of a meta...
In the days and weeks following the September 11 terrorist attacks, reports emerged of hate crimes, ...
This issue brief discusses an intersection that conjoins Latin Americans and Middle Eastern American...
The post-9/11 era in the United States has revealed a specific fear about immigrants as terrorist th...
As the culture and society of the United States is being transformed with an influx of Latino immigr...
In 2003, immigration and national security are intermingled in the U.S. in unprecedented ways. While...
This chapter, which will be part of a 5 volume treatise entitled, Hate Crimes: Perspectives and Appr...
The article examines jihad within what is loosely referred to as “the Western imagination.” Through ...
After 9/11, there has been an overall increase in violence committed against Middle Eastern/Muslim A...
Americans seem to fear Latinos (both immigrants and residents) almost as much as they fear terrorist...
Times of emergency may justify certain restrictions on liberties, but the nature of the terrorist ch...
In this article, we study the effects of the 2004 terrorist bombings in Madrid on ethnic segregation...
This article aims to examine how terrorist attacks influence public discourse concerning immigration...
Immigration politics has been significantly altered by the advent of America’s war on terror and the...
Projection of the terrorist narrative onto the bodies of Arabs, Muslims, Middle Easterns, and South ...
In the aftermath of the events of September 11, 2001, the virtually instantaneous hegemony of a meta...
In the days and weeks following the September 11 terrorist attacks, reports emerged of hate crimes, ...
This issue brief discusses an intersection that conjoins Latin Americans and Middle Eastern American...
The post-9/11 era in the United States has revealed a specific fear about immigrants as terrorist th...
As the culture and society of the United States is being transformed with an influx of Latino immigr...
In 2003, immigration and national security are intermingled in the U.S. in unprecedented ways. While...
This chapter, which will be part of a 5 volume treatise entitled, Hate Crimes: Perspectives and Appr...
The article examines jihad within what is loosely referred to as “the Western imagination.” Through ...
After 9/11, there has been an overall increase in violence committed against Middle Eastern/Muslim A...
Americans seem to fear Latinos (both immigrants and residents) almost as much as they fear terrorist...
Times of emergency may justify certain restrictions on liberties, but the nature of the terrorist ch...
In this article, we study the effects of the 2004 terrorist bombings in Madrid on ethnic segregation...
This article aims to examine how terrorist attacks influence public discourse concerning immigration...
Immigration politics has been significantly altered by the advent of America’s war on terror and the...
Projection of the terrorist narrative onto the bodies of Arabs, Muslims, Middle Easterns, and South ...
In the aftermath of the events of September 11, 2001, the virtually instantaneous hegemony of a meta...