Tweeting in Solidarity: Examining Frame Diffusion and Alignment Processes Among Immigrant-Serving NGOs Before and After Donald Trump’s Travel Ban

Authors

  • Wenlin Liu Assistant Professor Jack J. Valenti School of Communication University of Houston 3347 Cullen Blvd, Houston, TX 77204, United States
  • Summer Harlow Associate Professor Jack J. Valenti School of Communication University of Houston 3347 Cullen Blvd, Houston, TX 77204, United States

Keywords:

activism, collective action framing, immigration, NGOs, social media

Abstract

Social media like Twitter have been widely adopted by advocacy organizations to communicate dissent and mobilize consensus during recent bouts of collective action. Viewing organizational discourse on Twitter as a strategic framing process, this study examines whether and how frames may converge among a diverse group of immigrant-serving organizations after a suddenly imposed grievance, Donald Trump’s travel ban, in January 2017. Topic modeling of tweet content identifies shifts in topics and frames in tweets by Asian, Hispanic, Black, and pan immigrant-serving organizations two months before and after the ban. In addition, a quantitative comparison of the number of shared hashtags and retweeted users also indicates a significant increase after the ban among certain, but not all, types of NGOs. We argue the postban Twitter discourse, hashtag use, and retweet behaviors across the immigrant groups suggest a frame alignment process aimed at communicating solidarity and building cross-group alliances that ultimately can help with intersectional mobilization.

Author Biographies

Wenlin Liu, Assistant Professor Jack J. Valenti School of Communication University of Houston 3347 Cullen Blvd, Houston, TX 77204, United States

Asst. Professor, Strategic & Organizational Communication, University of Houston   2018 

Summer Harlow, Associate Professor Jack J. Valenti School of Communication University of Houston 3347 Cullen Blvd, Houston, TX 77204, United States

Associate Professor in JournalismUniversity of Houston  

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Published

2020-11-11

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Section

Articles