Log In
New user? Click here to register. Have you forgotten your password?
NC State University Libraries Logo
    Communities & Collections
    Browse NC State Repository
Log In
New user? Click here to register. Have you forgotten your password?
  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Michael Schulman, Committee Chair"

Filter results by typing the first few letters
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Results Per Page
  • Sort Options
  • No Thumbnail Available
    Social Movement Framing and the Reproduction of Inequality: Immigrant Restrictionists Constructing Virtual Selves on the Internet
    (2009-09-14) Bloch, Katrina Rebecca; Jeffrey Leiter, Committee Member; Steve McDonald, Committee Member; Richard Della Fave, Committee Member; Michael Schwalbe, Committee Member; Michael Schulman, Committee Chair
    This study analyzes the websites and discussion forums of immigrant restrictionist groups. The research combines the literature on social movement framing and theories of the generic processes of inequality. The research questions include: (1) How are the emotional framings of an organization’s website and discussion forums similar and how are they different? (2) How do the organizations use gendered symbols in their social movement frames, and (3) How do the immigrant restrictionist organizations construct a Latino/citizen binary? In total, 91 websites and 200 threads from three discussion forums are included in the study. To answer the first research question, I focus on the website and discussion forum for the organization, Americans for Legal Immigration (ALIPAC). The results suggest that the main website presents a guise of rationality, while participants of the discussion forum openly discuss emotions. In particular, participants privilege powerful emotions. To examine the second and third research questions, I analyze all the websites and forum threads. The organizations and forum participants portray immigrants as part of an invasion that threatens the sovereignty of the nation. Many of the groups and forum members claim to rely on legal distinctions between immigrants, but they often conflate Latinos with immigrants. Further, immigrant restrictionists discuss Latinos as if they are a homogenous group, as opposed to individuals with different national heritage and class backgrounds. In contrast, immigrant restrictionists portray themselves as soldiers who are protecting the nation and mothers who are protecting their children. Immigrant restrictionists also argue that politicians and corporations are greedy, but they fail to challenge the system at large. Instead of advocating a larger redistribution of wealth that would provide more stability for the working and middle class, immigrant restrictionists attempt to maintain the rights and privileges that they perceive illegal immigrants to threaten. Immigrant restrictionists reinforce an achievement ideology, whereby hard work should lead to success. However, group members argue that immigrants receive special privileges for breaking the law, while citizens are unable to achieve success through hard work. The immigrant restrictionists make sense of their position by drawing on widely held and available meanings related to race and gender. These ideologies influence their construction of an ideal national identity, a white male. The dissertation adds to the sociological literature in three ways. First, it combines the scholarship on social movement framing and the generic processes of inequality. The social movement frames draw from and reinforce group distinctions that legitimate the reproduction of inequality. Secondly, the study contributes to the understudied importance of emotional framing and gendered frames within social movement theory. Immigrant restrictionists privilege emotions associated with men, such as rationality, power, and pride. Further, the gendered symbols of soldiers and mothers are emotionally powerful symbols within the United States, because of ideals regarding what it means to be a man or woman. Finally, I show how the emotional framing is important for legitimating inequality. The immigrant restrictionists have identity stakes in being race neutral, but simultaneously say things that marginalize racial minorities. Thus, relying on claims of rationality, using specific discourses (e.g. anchor baby vs. infant), and using stigma transference are ways in which the group members engage in emotional framing activities that allow them to maintain positive self-appraisals despite contradictions in their social movement frames.
  • No Thumbnail Available
    Workplace Organization, Labor Process Control and Occupational Health
    (2006-08-10) Treiber, Linda Ann; Michael Schulman, Committee Chair; Catherine Zimmer, Committee Member; Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, Committee Member; Maxine Thompson, Committee Member
    The purpose of this research is to understand the complex relationships between working conditions and occupational health. The research draws from labor process theory that generally views worker control over the labor process as essential to non-alienated labor and from epidemiologic models of host, agent/exposure, and environment. Using General Social Survey 2002 cross sectional data, I investigate the effects of standard epidemiologic factors and worker labor process control factors in multivariate models to predict the dependent variables of workplace injury, persistent pain, exhaustion, and general health status. I suggest that labor process autonomy, social cohesion and skill utilization generally have positive and protective effects on worker occupational health status net of socio-demographic, job status, exposures, and environments. The addition of labor process factors to the epidemiologic triad improves the model specification of persistent pain, exhaustion and general health status; however, the specification of workplace injury models was not improved. Analyses indicate that labor process control is protective for workers who do not perform heavy lifting, but such control may exacerbate workplace injury for those who do perform heavy lifting. Of particular interest is the significant protective effect of perceived safety climate in all models, which may reflect normative consent. The study concludes that the sociological addition of labor process factors to the epidemiologic model needs to be further modified to include issues of labor process consent and organizational commitment.

Contact

D. H. Hill Jr. Library

2 Broughton Drive
Campus Box 7111
Raleigh, NC 27695-7111
(919) 515-3364

James B. Hunt Jr. Library

1070 Partners Way
Campus Box 7132
Raleigh, NC 27606-7132
(919) 515-7110

Libraries Administration

(919) 515-7188

NC State University Libraries

  • D. H. Hill Jr. Library
  • James B. Hunt Jr. Library
  • Design Library
  • Natural Resources Library
  • Veterinary Medicine Library
  • Accessibility at the Libraries
  • Accessibility at NC State University
  • Copyright
  • Jobs
  • Privacy Statement
  • Staff Confluence Login
  • Staff Drupal Login

Follow the Libraries

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Snapchat
  • LinkedIn
  • Vimeo
  • YouTube
  • YouTube Archive
  • Flickr
  • Libraries' news

ncsu libraries snapchat bitmoji

×