Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates perceptions of illegalized immigrants compared to native-born citizens and documented immigrants, focusing on how these groups are visually represented and understood in terms of race.
  • Findings revealed that illegalized immigrants are typically associated with dark skin and perceived negatively, while citizens are linked to lighter skin and seen positively, emphasizing racial distinctions.
  • The research highlights how legality influences these representations, with documented individuals viewed as trustworthy and illegalized immigrants framed as threats, underscoring the impact of U.S. imperialism and colorism on these narratives.

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Article Abstract

U.S. immigration discourse has spurred interest in characterizing who illegalized immigrants are or perceived to be. What are the associated visual representations of migrant illegality? Across two studies with undergraduate and online samples (N = 686), we used face-based reverse correlation and similarity sorting to capture and compare mental representations of illegalized immigrants, native-born U.S. citizens, and documented immigrants. Documentation statuses evoked racialized imagery. Immigrant representations were dark-skinned and perceived as non-white, while citizen representations were light-skinned, evaluated positively, and perceived as white. Legality further differentiated immigrant representations: documentation conjured trustworthy representations, illegality conjured threatening representations. Participants spontaneously sorted unlabeled faces by documentation status in a spatial arrangement task. Faces' spatial similarity correlated with their similarity in pixel luminance and "American" ratings, confirming racialized distinctions. Representations of illegalized immigrants were uniquely racialized as dark-skinned un-American threats, reflecting how U.S. imperialism and colorism set conditions of possibility for existing representations of migrant illegalization.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11082198PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-61203-2DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates perceptions of illegalized immigrants compared to native-born citizens and documented immigrants, focusing on how these groups are visually represented and understood in terms of race.
  • Findings revealed that illegalized immigrants are typically associated with dark skin and perceived negatively, while citizens are linked to lighter skin and seen positively, emphasizing racial distinctions.
  • The research highlights how legality influences these representations, with documented individuals viewed as trustworthy and illegalized immigrants framed as threats, underscoring the impact of U.S. imperialism and colorism on these narratives.
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