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Past Event

A Governance Studies Event

Democracy in the Age of New Media: A Report on the Media and the Immigration Debate

Immigration, Media & Journalism

Event Summary

The U.S. media have hindered effective policy-making on immigration for decades, and their impact has been increasing in recent years as a result of an ongoing evolution in the media industry. Changes in the media landscape—the advent of a 24-hour news cycle, the growing Latino media, and rise of conservative voices on cable TV news, are increasingly transforming the context of our nation’s political battles, and promoting stalemate on an issue that is inherently difficult to resolve. Immigration, a topic likely to resurface on the public agenda in 2009, will need to be addressed by the next administration and Congress.

Event Information

When

Thursday, September 25, 2008
2:00 PM to 4:00 PM

Where

Rotunda Room
Ronald Reagan Building
1300 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

Email: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

On September 25, the Brookings Institution, in partnership with the Norman Lear Center at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Southern California, released a report examining the new media’s role in the U.S. immigration debate, and explored how the media conditioned public opinion and the policy landscape.

Brookings Vice President and Director of Governance Studies Darrell West provided introductory remarks. Authors E.J. Dionne Jr., senior fellow at Brookings; Roberto Suro of the USC Annenberg School; and Banu Akdenizli of the Project for Excellence in Journalism presented their findings. A panel discussion, moderated by Harvard University’s Marvin Kalb, followed.


Download the full report »

Transcript

DARRELL M. WEST: Okay, why don’t we get started. I’m Darrell West; I’m Vice President and Director of Governance Studies at The Brookings Institution. And I would like to welcome you to a discussion of Democracy in the Age of New Media.

The last decade has been a revolutionary time, in the history of the American media. We’ve seen the rise of 500 television channels, the emergence of talk radio and the development of the Internet.

Participants

Introduction

Darrell M. West

Vice President and Director, Governance Studies

Featured Speakers

Banu Akdenizli

Index Methodologist, Project for Excellence in Journalism

E.J. Dionne, Jr.

Senior Fellow, Governance Studies

Martin Kaplan

Director, Norman Lear Center, USC Annenberg

Roberto Suro

Professor, USC Annenberg

Moderator

Marvin Kalb

Edward R. Murrow Professor Emeritus, Harvard University

Panelists

T. Alexander Aleinikoff

Dean, Georgetown University Law Center

James Carafano

Senior Research Fellow, The Heritage Foundation

Tamar Jacoby

President, ImmigrationWorks USA

Angela Kelley

Director, Immigration Policy Center

Mark Krikorian

Executive Director, Center for Immigration Studies

Steven Livingston

Professor of Media & Public Affairs, George Washington University

Ryan Lizza

Washington Correspondent, The New Yorker

Doris Meissner

Senior Fellow, Migration Policy Institute

Audrey Singer

Senior Fellow, Metropolitan Policy Program

Peter Skerry

Nonresident Senior Fellow, Governance Studies


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