Within the area of immigration politics and policy, my work argues for immigration’s foundational significance, historically and contemporarily, on American politics.
In my work, I have focused on
- the intersection of geography, place/space, and immigration and argue for the importance of racial legacies in examining state-level immigration laws,
- contextualizing the subfederal proliferation of restrictive immigration policies and the on-the-ground vigilantism against immigrants and people of color,
- how immigration is used and weaponized for political gain and in ways that run counter to American principles,
- the role of perceptions of Latino immigrants, in particular, and how these perceptions influence policy attitudes and political behavior more broadly, and
- the racial attitudes of non-Hispanic white Americans
Invite me to speak
Yalidy is available for speaking engagements on these and other topics
- The history of U.S. immigration laws and policies
- White Americans racial attitudes on immigration
- Latino/a immigration and immigrants
- Her book, Moral and Immoral whiteness in Immigration Politics
Email Yalidy.Matos@rutgers.edu
Ever wonder:
What is the current U.S. policy on immigration?
How does politics affect immigration?
How has immigration policy changed in the United States?
How are immigration policies constructed in the United States?
Check out my work
Publications
- Moral and Immoral Whiteness in Immigration Politics (OUP, 2023)
- “The “American DREAM”: Understanding White American Support for the DREAM Act and Punitive Immigration Policies” in Perspectives on Politics
- “The Politics of Pronouns: How Trump Framed the Ingroup in the 2016 Presidential Election” in Politics, Groups, and Identities
- “In Solidarity: Predicting African American and Black Immigrant Women’s Solidarity with Immigrants” in Politics & Gender
- “Geographies of Exclusion: The Importance of Racial Legacies in Examining State-Level Immigration Laws” in the American Behavioral Scientist
- “Immigration Within the Contemporary Political Discourse” in The Routledge Handbook of Immigration and Crime (pp. 220-235)
- “Priming Legality: Perceptions of Latino and Undocumented Latino Immigrants” in American Politics Research
- Dr. Matos on NPR “Biden speech acknowledges immigration and pathway to citizenship issues.” National Public Radio (NPR; Feb 8)
