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Past Event

A Governance Studies Event

Religious Activism and the Debate over Immigration Reform

Religion, Policy and Politics, Immigration, U.S. Politics

Event Summary

Religious leaders have demonstrated a remarkable degree of unity across theological, denominational, and ideological lines for comprehensive immigration reform. Religious groups have organized marches, prayer vigils and postcard campaigns to pressure the U.S. Congress to take up immigration reform. Largely because of the activism of these religious groups, immigration has remained on a legislative agenda crowded with other pressing domestic concerns. Why are religious groups so united on the question of immigration reform? How has their activism affected the debate on Capitol Hill? And what does this tell us about the role of faith in affecting debates over policy and building political coalitions?

Event Information

When

Tuesday, June 15, 2010
10:00 AM to 12:00 PM

Where

Saul/Zilkha Rooms
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

Email: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105


Brookings Senior Fellows E.J. Dionne and William Galston co-moderated a two-panel discussion to address these questions. Jim Wallis, president of Sojourners, gave opening remarks. The first panel focused on the role of religious leaders in building coalitions and affecting the debate. The second discussed the links among ethnicity, religiosity and partisanship.

*Dr. Robert P. Jones's full topline questionnaire, state polling and focus group reports for Ohio and Arkansas, and press release for the main findings are available on Public Religion Research Institute's website.

Transcript

E.J. DIONNE: I want to welcome everyone here today. This is a wonderful turnout and welcome to the Brookings Institution. My name is E.J. Dionne. I'm a Senior Fellow here as is my colleague, Bill Galston, who is my partner on this event today and on the larger project of which it's part.

Today's discussion of the role of religious groups in the immigration debate marks the beginning of a new project on religion, politics, and public policy where we'll build on the work we've done here at Brookings over many years now, and we want to thank the Ford Foundation for its support for this project.

Over the next couple of years we plan to explore a variety of issues in which Faith-Based groups are deeply engaged, including not only immigration but also the environment, poverty, the quest for social justice. We plan discussions and research on how the media cover and effect religious engagement with public life on issues surrounding efforts to protect the rights of conscience within the framework of consistent public policies. And, of course -- I say "of course" because everyone gets to this question eventually -- and we will also look at both changes and continuity in how religious groups and individuals are affecting electoral politics.

To carry out this project, we plan collaborations with scholars, religious leaders, journalists, and others around the country, short papers and articles and forums like the one we are holding today. Our purpose is to encourage a richer conversation on matters that are so often discussed, as so many of you in this room know, in stereotypical terms.

Participants

Opening Remarks

Jim Wallis

President and CEO
Sojourners

Panel 1- How Religious Activism Has Shaped Immigration Reform

Rev. Samuel Rodriguez

President
National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference

Kevin Appleby

Director of Migration Policy and Public Affairs
The US Conference of Catholic Bishops

Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori

Presiding Bishop
The Episcopal Church

Panel 2 – Understanding the Connection Among Ethnicity, Religiosity and Partisanship

David Leal

Associate Professor
Department of Government, University of Texas, Austin

Mark Lopez

Associate Director
Pew Hispanic Center

Dr. Robert P. Jones

CEO, Public Religion Research Institute


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