RT Article
T1 Whose Backyard? Boundary Making in NIMBY Opposition to Immigrant Services
JF Social justice
VO 35
IS 4
SP 66
OP 82
A1 Maney, Gregory M. 1967-2017
A2 Abraham, Margaret 1960-
LA English
YR 2008
UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1747156728
AB A study examined the issue of NIMBYism in two cases where community organizations sought to create spaces and put in place services for immigrants to the U.S. NIMBYism can be conceptualized as the informal policing of physical and symbolic boundaries in order to retain places of domination and control. Data were obtained from an ongoing collaborative research project on efforts to assist immigrants by the New York Asian Women's Center and the Workplace Project. Findings revealed that, in both cases, opponents had as their aim the imposition of physical boundaries indirectly through pressure on politicians and directly through endangering the safety of immigrants. Findings suggested that to legitimate their opposition, opponents created discourses of victimization depicting immigrants either as oppressive or as oppressed persons whose status victimized residents. Findings are discussed in detail.
K1 Stereotypes -- Social aspects
K1 Immigration opponents
K1 Self-efficacy -- Social aspects
K1 Victims
K1 Cultural exclusion
K1 Cultural boundaries
K1 Immigrants -- United States
K1 Immigrants
K1 NIMBY syndrome
K1 Services for immigrants