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Political Research Quarterly
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News

Spatial Proximity to the U.S.—Mexico Border and Newspaper Coverage of Immigration Issues

Regina P. Branton

Rice University, branton{at}rice.edu

Johanna Dunaway

Louisiana State University, jdunaway{at}lsu.edu

This article examines how geographic proximity to the U.S.—Mexico border influences newspaper coverage of immigration issues. The authors investigate two questions: Do media organizations spatially proximate to the border offer more frequent coverage of Latino immigration than media organizations farther removed from the border? Do media organizations spatially proximate to the border offer more frequent coverage of the negative aspects of immigration than media organizations farther removed from the border? We find that news organizations closer to the border generate a higher volume of articles about Latino immigration, articles featuring the negative aspects of immigration, and articles regarding illegal immigration.

Key Words: immigration • news • media coverage • institutional structure • spatial context

This version was published on June 1, 2009

Political Research Quarterly, Vol. 62, No. 2, 289-302 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1065912908319252


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